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    Home»Ethereum»Ethereum’s Fusaka Hard Fork To Go Live On December 3
    Ethereum

    Ethereum’s Fusaka Hard Fork To Go Live On December 3

    KryptonewsBy KryptonewsSeptember 19, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Ethereum’s core developers have selected early December for the tentative launch of the network’s next major hard fork, dubbed Fusaka, which aims to scale the network and make it more efficient.

    While the Fusaka upgrade will go live on Dec. 3, the increase in blob capacity will take place two weeks after, putting it around Dec. 17, followed by another blob capacity hard fork on Jan. 7, 2026.

    Both the blob capacity hard forks will more than double the current blob capacity, according to Ethereum researcher Christine D. Kim.

    Before the upgrade goes live on the Ethereum mainnet, three public testnets will be conducted between early October and mid-November.

    The slated timeline for Fusaka’s deployment. Source: Barnabas Busa

    “The initial conclusion is that we can go ahead with a Max blob count of 15 for BPO1 [Blob Parameter Only] and Max blob count of 21 for BPO2. There are a total of 5 BPOs planned for Fusaka, so we can ensure mainnet scales a lot – safely,” Ethereum developer community ethPandaOps said in an X post on Thursday.

    BPO (Blob-Parameter only) forks only change the parameters pertaining to blob targets and limits. These hard forks do not require any updates from the client-side.

    Blobs store large data sets offchain, which makes layer-2 networks more efficient while decreasing the cost of transactions.

    Blob usage has been constantly inching upward since the Dencun upgrade went live. Currently, the average blob count per block stands at 5.1, while the figure was a lot lower at 0.9 in March 2023, according to a Dune dashboard.

    On Monday, the Ethereum Foundation announced a four-week code audit program, offering $2 million to developers who discover and disclose vulnerabilities in the Fusaka codebase.

    Fusaka’s launch follows the Pectra upgrade on May 7, which raised the validator staking limit, introduced account abstraction and made layer-2 networks more efficient.