Tap to Trade in Gate Square, Win up to 50 GT & Merch!
Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
Click the registration link to join
https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7401
Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
 can potentially scale Ethereum thousands of times beyond current capabilities, while maintaining decentralization. He stressed that physics imposes strict limits on latency improvements, particularly due to the speed of light and the need to support nodes in rural and decentralized environments.
Buterin noted that Ethereum must remain economically viable for nodes outside major data centers.
He stressed that the blockchain must pass the “walkaway test,” functioning without constant social rebalancing and ensuring that most of the operational burden is economically supported.
Moderate Latency Reductions and L2 Solutions
While moderate latency reductions are possible through peer-to-peer improvements, erasure coding, and smaller validator subsets, Buterin believes latency gains are limited to 2–4 seconds. “Ethereum is not a video game server; it is the world’s heartbeat,” he stated. Applications requiring faster execution will continue to rely on Layer 2 (L2) solutions.
Buterin also highlighted future AI-driven use cases, which may require hyper-local chains, such as city-scale or even building-scale networks.
L2s will serve both hyper-localized AI applications and planet-wide scalability needs. He concluded that Ethereum’s design prioritizes global decentralization while accommodating specialized L2 networks for high-speed or hyper-local requirements.
Ethereum’s roadmap continues to balance extreme scalability with decentralization, focusing on bandwidth and innovative cryptography rather than chasing latency reductions that could compromise the network’s security and inclusivity.
Ultimately, Buterin stresses that true trustlessness requires simplifying the Ethereum protocol itself, ensuring more people can understand and audit the system to combat the risks of complexity and reliance on a small circle of experts.