In a significant strategic pivot on February 3, 2026, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin issued a stark re-evaluation of the network’s scaling trajectory. Declaring that the original “rollup-centric” roadmap “no longer makes sense,” Buterin signaled a move away from viewing Layer-2 (L2) networks as the primary “shards” of Ethereum.
Instead, he argued that the ecosystem must return to its decentralization roots, prioritizing Layer-1 (L1) performance and user self-sovereignty.
This “reality check” comes as Ethereum trades near $3,040, roughly 40% below its 2025 all-time high, while the network handles record-breaking volume of over 2.6 million daily transactions.
Buterin’s critique centers on the observation that the L2 ecosystem has failed to keep pace with Ethereum’s core decentralization standards. He noted that while networks like Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base have absorbed 95% of total throughput, their progress toward “Stage 2” (full decentralization) has been “far slower and more difficult” than projected.
Buterin has designated 2026 as the year of the “Rebellion”, a concerted effort to reclaim “computing self-sovereignty” from centralized tech providers. This roadmap focuses on upgrades that allow Ethereum to function as a “civilizational infrastructure” resistant to censorship and corporate dominance.
| Upgrade Feature | Technical Objective | Impact on Users |
| 5x Gas Limit Increase | Target limits of 100M–200M via the Glamsterdam fork. | Sustain low L1 fees regardless of L2 efficiency. |
| Enshrined ZK-EVM | Native verification of proofs at the L1 consensus level. | Enables trustless L1-L2 interoperability and “god mode” security. |
| Helios & PeerDAS | Light-client verification and data availability sampling. | Run full-node verification on smartphones and consumer laptops. |
| Privacy (ORAM/PIR) | Oblivious RAM and Private Information Retrieval. | Query blockchain data without revealing search patterns to providers. |
These tools are designed to eliminate the “trust-me” infrastructure, such as reliance on centralized RPC providers like Infura, moving toward a default state where user software verifies the chain directly.
The shift in strategy introduces new variables for the 2026 market structure as Ethereum balances L1 expansion with its existing L2 ecosystem.
The market structure for Ethereum has shifted from “scaling via rollups” to “scaling via sovereign L1.” Buterin’s manifesto marks the end of the era where L2s were given a pass on centralization for the sake of adoption.
For 2026, the focus is on confirmation of decentralization: L2s must provide unique value, such as privacy or ultra-low latency, rather than just cheap gas, while L1 reclaims its role as the primary execution environment for those demanding total censorship resistance.
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