Ethereum’s most ambitious overhaul since the Merge has a clear destination — and a very heated argument about how fast to get there. Vitalik Buterin’s updated Ethereum development roadmap, published this week under the name “Lean Ethereum” strawmap, lays out a sweeping vision to transform nearly every major layer of the blockchain. The reception from the network’s research community has been largely enthusiastic. But the consensus breaks down fast once the conversation turns to timeline.
The updated strawmap represents what Buterin describes as Ethereum’s biggest rebuild since the Merge. The original version appeared in February, but this week’s revision carries notable structural changes — and has drawn immediate, detailed responses from the network’s top technical minds.
At its core, the proposal calls for sweeping changes across four dimensions: speed, cost efficiency, privacy, and quantum-resistant cryptography. These aren’t incremental tweaks. Together they would touch consensus mechanisms, cryptographic foundations, data storage architecture, and the experience of everyday users transacting on the network.
The fact that so many researchers agree on the direction is itself significant. Ethereum has historically been a network where consensus — both technical and social — is hard-won. That the research community is largely aligned on privacy, scalability, and next-generation cryptography as the right priorities signals a maturity in how the ecosystem thinks about its long-term architecture.
Researchers across the Ethereum ecosystem broadly support the roadmap’s core vision. The debate isn’t about whether Ethereum should prioritize privacy, stronger cryptography, or new ways to scale — it’s about whether the network is moving fast enough to realize those goals before competitors or external threats close the window.
That framing matters. When a technical community stops arguing about what to build and starts arguing about speed, it’s usually a sign of growing confidence — and growing impatience.
Eli Ben-Sasson, co-founder of StarkWare, offered one of the most substantive public responses. He characterized the roadmap as “many good things, a few unclear things, still a few problems” — a measured but broadly positive verdict.
His strongest praise was reserved for the decision to place recursive STARKs at the center of Ethereum’s future. This cryptographic technique is designed to make the network dramatically easier to verify, and Ben-Sasson noted it represents a significant philosophical shift. For years, much of the Ethereum community was skeptical of STARKs technology. Its elevation to a cornerstone of the roadmap marks a real turning point.
On quantum safety, Ben-Sasson was direct: “Quantum safety — excellent. Glad to see this as a high priority.” But his enthusiasm had limits. “‘3-4 years’ as the timeline is way too long,” he wrote on X. “Especially for quantum readiness.” The urgency behind that statement is real — quantum computing threats don’t operate on a blockchain’s preferred schedule.
Former Ethereum Foundation researcher Dankrad Feist struck a similar but even more aggressive tone. He called the roadmap’s vision “really cool,” specifically highlighting features like near-instant Ethereum transaction finality and dramatically higher throughput as potentially transformative for the network.
Then came the challenge. “But 3-4 years is very slow,” Feist wrote. “I think we should be ambitious and get it done in ~1 year.” He went further, suggesting that recent advances in AI tools — including large language models — could meaningfully accelerate development timelines if the community chose to deploy them seriously.
Whether a one-year timeline is operationally realistic is a separate question. But the fact that a former Ethereum Foundation researcher is publicly pushing it signals something important: the urgency inside this community is intensifying, not fading.
Ethereum Foundation researcher Barnabé Monnot took a more granular approach, comparing the updated strawmap directly to the February version. His analysis surfaced some notable structural shifts.
Upgrades designed to speed up block production have been pushed further into the future in the updated version. Meanwhile, changes to Ethereum’s consensus system have moved up the roadmap — a reprioritization that Monnot suggests could ultimately benefit the network by delivering faster transaction finality and stronger censorship resistance sooner.
The removal of several previously proposed features also drew attention. These cuts appear deliberate, aimed at streamlining the upgrade path rather than simply deferring complexity.
Ben-Sasson also raised a pointed question about one of Buterin’s more technical proposals: the introduction of new types of blockchain “state” — essentially, the data Ethereum stores about accounts, balances, and smart contracts. His response was blunt: “New kinds of state: what does that mean? Who is affected by it?” He called for more explanation before the community could meaningfully evaluate it.
It’s a fair challenge. Proposals that touch the state layer have broad implications for developers, users, and infrastructure providers alike. Clarity there isn’t optional — it’s a precondition for informed community buy-in.
Taken together, the reactions reveal something more interesting than a simple disagreement over scheduling. The Ethereum development roadmap has achieved something rare: near-unanimous agreement on direction from a technically diverse, often fractious community. Privacy, cryptography, scalability, and quantum resistance are no longer contested goals — they are settled priorities.
What’s contested is execution velocity. And that’s a healthier problem to have than strategic confusion. The pressure from figures like Ben-Sasson and Feist to compress timelines could itself become a forcing function — pushing teams to adopt new tools, parallelize work streams, and treat urgency as an engineering constraint rather than an aspiration.
The upgrades on the table represent the most significant rebuild Ethereum has undertaken since the Merge. How quickly the network can close the gap between its stated ambitions and working code may be the defining question for Ethereum’s competitive position over the next several years.
It is an updated long-term roadmap published by Vitalik Buterin outlining a comprehensive overhaul of the Ethereum blockchain, originally first released in February.
To make Ethereum faster, cheaper to run, more private, and resistant to quantum computing threats.
Experts like Eli Ben-Sasson and Dankrad Feist believe the proposed 3-4 year timeline is too slow, particularly given the urgency of quantum readiness, and suggest the work could be completed in approximately one year, potentially aided by AI development tools.
Ben-Sasson questioned proposals for new types of blockchain state, calling for more clarity on their implications. Barnabé Monnot also noted that certain block production upgrades have been delayed in the updated version, while consensus changes have been moved earlier in the roadmap.
Article produced with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by the editorial team.
