The Fusaka protocol has officially launched on the Ethereum mainnet, marking a significant step forward in the network’s ongoing evolution. This development coincides with the activation of Ethereum’s PeerDAS (Peer Data Availability Sampling) feature, a core component of the broader scaling roadmap designed to dramatically improve network performance.
PeerDAS fundamentally enhances Ethereum’s data capacity by enabling nodes to efficiently sample and verify data from rollups. This architectural shift substantially reduces the data burden on the main chain, leading to a notable decrease in transaction fees for layer-2 solutions. The increased data throughput is a critical prerequisite for achieving a more seamless and responsive user experience across the ecosystem.
The launch of Fusaka leverages these underlying improvements, providing developers with new tools to build applications that benefit from lower costs and higher throughput. Industry analysts highlight that the combined effect of protocol-layer upgrades like PeerDAS and application-layer innovations such as Fusaka is accelerating Ethereum’s path toward mass adoption. The focus remains on creating a network that is not only secure and decentralized but also capable of delivering the speed and affordability required for mainstream use cases.

