
Ethereum Foundation’s ‘Strawmap’ outlines a long-term vision for 7 hard forks by 2029, targeting 8-second finality, quantum-resistant cryptography, and native privacy.
While market sentiment remains cautious, the Ethereum Foundation has laid out a sweeping, long-term technical vision. A research draft, termed the “Strawmap,” outlines a potential development trajectory stretching to the end of the decade, signaling that Ethereum’s core protocol is far from complete.
Authored by researcher Justin Drake, the “Strawmap” originates from the Ethereum Foundation’s research division. The document is explicitly non-binding. Its purpose is to provide an early framework to guide research and development, well before the network’s decentralized governance processes formally ratify any specific upgrades.
The central thesis involves the potential for seven hard forks through 2029. This underscores a commitment to significant, ongoing evolution of the base Layer 1 blockchain.
The roadmap is organized around five primary goals, or “North Stars,” defining the project’s future direction:
While the vision is long-term, developer attention is currently fixed on two major upgrades slated for 2026.
The first, Glamsterdam, is highlighted in a Protocol Priorities Update. Key objectives include a substantially higher gas limit (moving “toward and beyond 100 million” per block), larger “blob” parameters for Layer 2 rollups, and the implementation of ePBS (enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation). ePBS is designed to decentralize block production and mitigate MEV risks. Furthermore, a decoupling of state generation from execution gas is planned, allowing for greater computational load without unnecessarily inflating the blockchain state.
Scheduled for the second half of 2026, Hegotá is set to follow. A central component of this upgrade is the introduction of Verkle Trees. This novel data structure is expected to significantly reduce the hardware requirements for running a node, marking a crucial step toward “statelessness” and, by extension, improved network decentralization.
Amidst these technical developments, market conditions present a mixed picture. On February 25, spot Ethereum ETFs recorded net inflows of $157.14 million, halting a five-week streak of outflows, according to the source text.
Conversely, while over 30% of the ETH supply is now staked, yields have declined to approximately 2.8%. This reduction makes the lock-up period less attractive when measured against “risk-free” alternatives. Price action also reflects pressure, with Ether currently trading at $2,027.30, representing a decline of -32.90% over the preceding 30 days.
Ecosystem development continues apace, particularly in zero-knowledge and privacy technology. For instance, Brevis reported that its Pico Prism zkVM can now verify over 99% of Ethereum Layer 1 blocks in under 12 seconds, utilizing far fewer GPUs than previous methods.
Ultimately, the Strawmap reveals a dual-track strategy: a reinforced, capable base layer working in tandem with highly specialized Layer 2 networks. Whether this long-term clarity translates into tangible positive momentum and user adoption by the latter half of 2026 will largely depend on the seamless execution of the Glamsterdam upgrade and the concrete delivery of its promised scaling and privacy advancements.
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