Vitalik has just released a very interesting roadmap for Ethereum until 2029, and honestly, it's worth paying attention to what's coming. The co-founder is talking about an ambitious plan to make the base layer much faster, lighter, and eventually resistant to quantum computers.



Let's start with the quick slots. Today, Ethereum operates on 12-second intervals, and the proposal is to gradually reduce this using a square root of 2 formula. That is: 12 seconds → 8 → 6 → 4 → 3 → potentially 2 seconds. Sounds ambitious? It really is. But Vitalik makes it clear that the last steps depend on intensive research.

What caught my attention is how this relates to security. Many people think that faster slots mean less security, but that's not quite true. The major enabler here is improvements in the peer-to-peer network, especially with erasure coding. Basically, instead of each node receiving entire blocks from multiple peers, blocks would be divided into fragments — say, eight pieces, of which any four can reconstruct the full block. This significantly reduces latency, and internal statistics suggest that this architecture could decrease block propagation time at the 95th percentile, making shorter slots feasible without compromising security.

Now, the most interesting part: finality in seconds, not minutes. Currently, Ethereum's finality is around 16 minutes. The plan proposes decoupling slots from finality and adopting a Byzantine algorithm called the Miminimum variant. In the final scenario, finality could drop to 6 to 16 seconds. Sounds like science fiction? Well, yes. But the trajectory described involves progressively shorter intervals — including sub-minute finality — before reaching single-digit seconds with more aggressive parameters.

The document calls it "strawmap" — a mix of strawman and roadmap — and it's important to clarify: this isn't an official promise, it's more a coordination and debate tool. It extends until 2029, assuming roughly a fork every six months. The five pillars include fast L1, "gigagas" L1 with 1 gigagas per second via zkEVMs, "teragas" L2 with data availability of 1 gigabyte per second, post-quantum cryptography, and first-class privacy.

Regarding quantum resistance: Vitalik mentions that this could be grouped with a complete cryptographic overhaul, including hash-based post-quantum signatures and a hash function friendly to STARKs. They are evaluating responses on Poseidon2, considering increasing rounds, reverting to Poseidon1, or adopting conventional hashes like BLAKE3. Heavy research is underway.

One curious thing: quantum resistance at the slot level might arrive before protection at the finality level. If powerful quantum computers suddenly emerge, finality guarantees could fail while the chain continues operating. It’s a scenario they need to consider.

In summary, Vitalik describes this as a gradual component-by-component replacement — like the ship of Theseus. We can expect to see progressive reductions in both slot time and finality time, intertwined with a transformation of Ethereum’s slot and consensus structure. Whether the network can reach 2-second slots and single-digit finality by the end of the decade depends on research, governance, and decentralized consensus. But the direction is clear: faster blocks, faster settlement, a protocol prepared to survive hardware cycles and cryptographic eras.

Currently, ETH is trading at $2.32K with a 0.44% increase in the last 24 hours. In any case, these structural changes in Ethereum are the kind of thing that could define the network’s next decade. Worth keeping a close eye on.
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