Source: Cointime
Original Title: Ethereum’s ‘Hegota’ upgrade slated for late 2026 as devs accelerate roadmap
Original Link:
Overview
Ethereum developers earlier this month agreed on the name and rough timing of the network’s second major upgrade scheduled for 2026, settling on “Hegota” as the next milestone in the blockchain’s development roadmap.
Hegota will follow “Glamsterdam,” Ethereum’s next major upgrade, which is currently expected to roll out in the first half of 2026. That sequencing places Hegota tentatively in the second half of the year, continuing a faster cadence of protocol upgrades than Ethereum has historically maintained.
Development Approach Shift
The decision reflects a relatively new approach to Ethereum development, with core contributors aiming to ship network changes more frequently rather than bundling large numbers of upgrades into releases that happen roughly once a year. This shift comes after developers faced criticism from parts of the Ethereum community earlier this year, with some users and builders arguing that protocol development was lagging behind the network’s rapid growth and increasing demands.
Glamsterdam and Future Timeline
Developers are expected to finalize the full scope of Glamsterdam at their next meeting in early January. As a result, no major headline changes—formally known as Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs)—are expected to be announced for Hegota until at least February. Even so, early speculation has already begun around what the upgrade could include.
Potential Features
One likely source of potential Hegota features is deferred work from Glamsterdam. In previous Ethereum upgrades, EIPs that failed to make it into a release due to time or complexity constraints were often pushed to the following upgrade, and developers expect a similar dynamic this time around.
Initial discussions around Hegota have focused on Verkle Trees, a newer data structure designed to help Ethereum nodes store and verify large amounts of data more efficiently. If implemented, Verkle Trees could significantly reduce hardware requirements for node operators, improving decentralization by making it easier for more participants to run nodes.
Naming Convention
As with past upgrades, the name “Hegota” follows Ethereum’s convention of combining a Devcon host city with a star name. In this case, the name is derived from “Bogota” (the execution layer upgrade) and “Heze” (the consensus layer upgrade).
According to the Ethereum Foundation’s recent announcement, Fusaka shipped PeerDAS in addition to a myriad of minor features, and Glamsterdam’s major features will include Block-level Access Lists and enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation. The community now begins outlining the subsequent upgrade: Hegota.
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OnchainSniper
· 9h ago
I like the rhythm of this roadmap, and the name Hegota is also quite good. We should see results by the end of 2026...
View OriginalReply0
DogeBachelor
· 9h ago
Hmm... Hegota? Another upgrade name that sounds pretty edgy haha. It took until 2026 to get started, and the progress on ETH is really impressive.
View OriginalReply0
LightningClicker
· 9h ago
Another new name? Hegota sounds so unfamiliar... Anyway, I'm just waiting to see if they can actually deliver by 2026.
View OriginalReply0
TokenToaster
· 9h ago
Hegota, this name is... how should I say it, a bit casual, but as long as it can push forward the Ethereum matter, it's fine.
View OriginalReply0
StealthMoon
· 9h ago
Hegota? That name sounds a bit strange... But 2026 is still too far away; who knows what Ethereum will be like then.
Ethereum's 'Hegota' upgrade slated for late 2026 as devs accelerate roadmap
Source: Cointime Original Title: Ethereum’s ‘Hegota’ upgrade slated for late 2026 as devs accelerate roadmap Original Link:
Overview
Ethereum developers earlier this month agreed on the name and rough timing of the network’s second major upgrade scheduled for 2026, settling on “Hegota” as the next milestone in the blockchain’s development roadmap.
Hegota will follow “Glamsterdam,” Ethereum’s next major upgrade, which is currently expected to roll out in the first half of 2026. That sequencing places Hegota tentatively in the second half of the year, continuing a faster cadence of protocol upgrades than Ethereum has historically maintained.
Development Approach Shift
The decision reflects a relatively new approach to Ethereum development, with core contributors aiming to ship network changes more frequently rather than bundling large numbers of upgrades into releases that happen roughly once a year. This shift comes after developers faced criticism from parts of the Ethereum community earlier this year, with some users and builders arguing that protocol development was lagging behind the network’s rapid growth and increasing demands.
Glamsterdam and Future Timeline
Developers are expected to finalize the full scope of Glamsterdam at their next meeting in early January. As a result, no major headline changes—formally known as Ethereum Improvement Proposals (EIPs)—are expected to be announced for Hegota until at least February. Even so, early speculation has already begun around what the upgrade could include.
Potential Features
One likely source of potential Hegota features is deferred work from Glamsterdam. In previous Ethereum upgrades, EIPs that failed to make it into a release due to time or complexity constraints were often pushed to the following upgrade, and developers expect a similar dynamic this time around.
Initial discussions around Hegota have focused on Verkle Trees, a newer data structure designed to help Ethereum nodes store and verify large amounts of data more efficiently. If implemented, Verkle Trees could significantly reduce hardware requirements for node operators, improving decentralization by making it easier for more participants to run nodes.
Naming Convention
As with past upgrades, the name “Hegota” follows Ethereum’s convention of combining a Devcon host city with a star name. In this case, the name is derived from “Bogota” (the execution layer upgrade) and “Heze” (the consensus layer upgrade).
According to the Ethereum Foundation’s recent announcement, Fusaka shipped PeerDAS in addition to a myriad of minor features, and Glamsterdam’s major features will include Block-level Access Lists and enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation. The community now begins outlining the subsequent upgrade: Hegota.