Ethereum, the world’s second-largest crypto by market cap, is at a crossroads. Once celebrated for its visionary approach, relentless focus on long-term research, and bleeding-edge innovation, Ethereum faces mounting competitive pressures and internal woes.
With Bitcoin dominance over 60% and ETH price almost 70% off its all-time-high of three years ago, the Ethereum ship appears to have run aground. Fortunately, its fervent community is rallying to right the course.
In his article, Ethereum’s Strategic Pivot, David Hoffman of Bankless explores the Layer 1’s pivotal challenges and offers insight into turning the “gargantuan ship of Ethereum” around.
How Ethereum veered off course
Ethereum’s decentralized structure combines a multitude of voices and incentives, making achieving consensus a complex task. It has been slow to respond to changing market dynamics and urgency has grown within the community to adapt. However, pinpointing the problems and coordinating solutions is a lengthy task.
Hoffman spoke with Ethereum Foundation researchers Ansgar Dietrichs and Dankrad Feist to outline several core issues facing the flailing blockchain, including underinvestment in the Layer 1. The narrative for Ethereum scaling has long been dominated by Layer 2s. But the plethora of competing rollups growing in isolation causes interoperability challenges that give even the staunchest of ETH maxis a sense of vertigo.
Dietrichs and Feist argue that Ethereum should return its focus to scaling and improving the base layer and following a product-first approach that prioritizes user experience and adapts faster to a fast-paced industry packed with competitive threats.
Ethereum’s leadership vacuum translates into a lack of clear direction and accountability for the mother chain’s missteps, and an “Ivory tower culture” results in insular research practices that stifle open collaboration and lead to operational inefficiencies.
All these challenges have caused Ethereum’s to veer off course. As CryptoSlate recently reported, its market dominance has sunk to a five-year low, falling below 8% as alternative blockchains attract users with lower fees and faster transactions. Even as Layer-2 solutions improve efficiency, they also draw activity away from the mainnet, reducing network revenue and threatening Ethereum’s competitive edge.
Strategic realignment – where Ethereum goes from here
Despite the less-than-favorable panorama, Hoffman and his Bankless guests remain optimistic about Ethereum’s future, presenting a series of strategic pivots to revitalize the network.
One major initiative is aggressive Layer 1 scaling, with plans to increase gas limits tenfold over the next two years. Short-term upgrades target a rise from 36 million to 100 million gas by the end of 2024, while the upcoming Glamsterdam hard fork aims to push this further to 300 million.
Integrating zk-based systems (zkVMs) could eventually expand Layer 1 capacity by 100 times without compromising decentralization, turning long-term research ambitions into near-term engineering goals.
Alongside these technical upgrades, the ETH community is shifting from a protocol-first to a product-focused mindset, emphasizing user experience and developer support. Leadership and coordination are also receiving renewed attention, with the Ethereum Foundation appointing new co-executive directors, Tomasz Stańczak and Hsiao-Wei Wang, to provide stronger direction and internal cohesion.
Ethereum is also working to standardize interoperability and incentivize deeper integration between Layer 1 and Layer 2 solutions, positioning itself as a service provider for L2s. Recognizing the need for greater urgency, the network is embracing shorter roadmap cycles as well.
The Pectra upgrade and beyond
The upcoming Pectra upgrade, scheduled for May 7, is a focal point for these changes. Pectra promises to enhance wallet features, ease transaction costs, and improve overall scalability, reviving on-chain activity and restoring confidence in the ecosystem. Industry leaders believe these improvements could be a catalyst for renewed growth, potentially driving Ethereum back toward the $3,000 mark.
Further upgrades, such as PeerDAS and Fusaka, are planned to expand data availability and reduce L2 transaction costs. However, as CryptoSlate reported, Ethereum’s ability to support a flourishing L2 ecosystem depends on continuous technical progress.
Hoffman emphasizes that the Ethereum Foundation’s renewed leadership is only part of the equation. The broader ETH community must also adapt, updating its messaging and aligning its vision with the platform’s evolving strategy.
As he puts it:
“Ethereum is a big tent that holds space for many different voices.”
The challenge ahead is to harness that diversity and steer the ship toward a more scalable, user-friendly, and competitive future—or remain lost at sea, floundering among the waves.
Ethereum Market Data
At the time of press 8:00 pm UTC on Apr. 20, 2025, Ethereum is ranked #2 by market cap and the price is down 2.09% over the past 24 hours. Ethereum has a market capitalization of $190.88 billion with a 24-hour trading volume of $7.71 billion. Learn more about Ethereum ›
Crypto Market Summary
At the time of press 8:00 pm UTC on Apr. 20, 2025, the total crypto market is valued at at $2.67 trillion with a 24-hour volume of $46.99 billion. Bitcoin dominance is currently at 62.87%. Learn more about the crypto market ›