
Forkcast Ethereum Upgrade Tracker
An experimental tool designed to help users better understand Ethereum upgrades and compare headliner proposals.
Ethereum upgrade tracking tool.
ePBS vs delayed execution in Glamsterdam.
Velodrome pilots VerifiedERC20 tokens.
Arbitrum Timeboost generates $2m in fees.
The Ethereum Foundation’s Protocol and Application Support team launched forkcast.org, an experimental tool designed to help users better understand Ethereum network upgrades. Forkcast provides detailed pages on upcoming upgrades, including Fusaka and Glamsterdam. The platform highlights competing “headliner” proposals, which are EIPs considered to be the most impactful for the next major network upgrade. Forkcast offers insights into which EIPs are slated for inclusion, who stands to benefit from them, and how to compare different proposals. Forkcast also breaks down the stakeholder impact and alignment with broader network goals.
Ethereum researcher Toni Wahrstätter published a research post on whether ePBS EIP‑7732 should be included in the Glamsterdam upgrade. Enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation (ePBS) decouples block proposal from block building by embedding PBS directly into Ethereum’s consensus layer. ePBS enables faster beacon block propagation and allows protocol-enforced payments between builders and proposers, but introduces significant complexity and risks such as post-state monopolies. Instead, Wahrstätter proposes shipping Delayed Execution EIP-7886 in Glamsterdam, which achieves about 80% of ePBS’s pipelining benefits while adding minimal complexity. Full ePBS can still be added later if needed.
Velodrome is piloting VerifiedERC20 tokens, a new standard designed to boost rewards for human users over bots. VerifiedERC20 aims to reward real users, help projects meet legal and compliance requirements without compromising privacy, and maintain DeFi’s composability and immutability features. The implementation, built in partnership with Celo and Self Protocol, extends OpenZeppelin’s ERC20 to support hooks, which are modular smart contracts that execute checks before or after token functions. Token issuers can choose to include checks against OFAC restrictions, enforce jurisdiction-specific rules, and verify wallet age.
Arbitrum Timeboost, a transaction ordering policy that allows users to optionally pay a fee for priority block inclusion, has generated over $2 million in fees for the Arbitrum DAO since launching in April 2025. The policy uses an encrypted mempool to ensure that transaction details remain hidden until the transaction order is finalized. It also protects users from MEV attacks. Timeboost is live on Arbitrum One and Arbitrum Nova.
FreePay payment terminal
Merit launches Terminal
Ethereum apps generate $26b in fees
Coinbase acquires Liquifi
OpenAI denies Stock Tokens
Circle Mint euro-to-USDC onramp
Arca proposes Adjusted Market Cap
Disclaimer: Content is for informational purposes only, not endorsement or investment advice. The accuracy of information is not guaranteed.

Introducing Ethereum Community Foundation
The organization focuses on funding immutable, credibly neutral, token-free projects that contribute to burning ETH.
Zak.eth introduces the ECF.
Ethereum House launches a hub in SF.
Circle introduces the Circle Gateway.
QuickNode releases Aerodrome Swap API.
Blockchain protocol engineer Zak Cole introduced the Ethereum Community Foundation (ECF), a new organization dedicated to funding Ethereum projects that aim to increase the price and utility of ETH. The organization serves ETH holders, operating under the motto that “ETH to $10k is a requirement, not a meme.” The ECF focuses on supporting immutable, credibly neutral, token-free projects that contribute to burning ETH. Funded projects must be committed to growing ETH’s value and enhancing its institutional adoption. Cole criticized the absence of a burn mechanism in EIP-4844 and noted that many projects previously funded by the Ethereum Foundation eventually turned into for-profit ventures. The ECF emphasizes optimizing for ETH price, network security, and broader usage. As its first initiative, the ECF is launching the Ethereum Validator Association (EVA), which will enable validators to express preferences using their staked ETH, aiming to improve validator representation within Ethereum.
The Ethereum House introduced its permanent builders studio and community hub for Ethereum in downtown San Francisco. The hub is located on the 12th floor of Frontier Tower, a “vertical village” hosting AI, robotics, biotech, and longevity projects. The Ethereum House initiative is supported by an Ethereum Foundation grant. The Ethereum House centers on three core pillars: a Builders Studio where founders, developers, and researchers collaborate and build; a Salon Series featuring curated discussions; and partnerships with universities to connect academic research and students with real-world Ethereum development. The hub will also host Ethereum’s 10th birthday celebration on July 30th.
Stablecoin issuer Circle unveiled Circle Gateway, a new solution designed to unify USDC balances across multiple chains using a non-custodial smart contract. The feature will enable users to perform single-click crosschain USDC transfers, eliminating the need for bridging and switching networks. Aimed at boosting capital efficiency and simplifying liquidity management in today’s fragmented ecosystem, Circle Gateway will initially launch on Avalanche, Base, and Ethereum testnets later in July.
Ethereum infrastructure provider QuickNode launched the Aerodrome Swap API, a developer-friendly interface for interacting with the Aerodrome DEX on Base. The API offers both REST and WebSocket endpoints, enabling developers to access extensive DEX data, including prices, fees, reserves, trading volumes, APR, and TVL. Beyond data access, the API allows traders to execute token swaps with features like routing optimization, slippage protection, and pre-trade price quotes, all through a single API call. Developers can leverage the API to build applications like analytics dashboards, portfolio trackers, yield optimization tools, and trading bots.
CoW Protocol deploys on Polygon
Katana goes live on mainnet
Sky achieves 900m USDS supplied
Onchain Labs introduces Talos
Aligned introduces Suite of Products
Superseed launches SUPR incentives
Pods releases a new homepage
Base targets higher elasticity
Eric on ETH’s MicroStrategy era
Privy cross-boarder payments case study
Disclaimer: Content is for informational purposes only, not endorsement or investment advice. The accuracy of information is not guaranteed.

Robinhood Token Stocks On Arbitrum
Over 200 U.S. stocks and ETFs tokenized on Arbitrum One are now available for European Robinhood users.
Robinhood launches Token Stocks.
ethPandaOps recommends 45m gas limit.
ENS launches ENSv2 info hub.
OpenZepplin sunsets Defender.
Robinhood launched tokenized stocks and ETFs on Arbitrum One, offering access to over 200 U.S. tokenized equities onchain. The release is initially available to European customers and features zero commissions, dividend payouts, and 24/5 trading. Robinhood plans to migrate the tokenized assets to Robinhood Chain, its own Layer 2 network built on the Arbitrum Orbit stack. For each share purchased, one token is minted onchain. Future phases will allow users to transfer stock tokens to self-custodial wallets. Additionally, Robinhood announced plans to introduce a crypto perpetual futures exchange and aims to offer access to tokenized private company shares, such as tokenized OpenAI and SpaceX shares.
ethPandaOps, an Ethereum DevOps team specializing in testing and infrastructure for protocol upgrades, now recommends that validators increase the gas limit to 45 million. The recommendation comes after extensive testing, demonstrating that network propagation remains within safe margins, no new EIPs are required for the change, and decentralization is not compromised. All major Ethereum client teams have released new client versions with a default gas limit of 45 million. The broader Ethereum L1 scaling roadmap aims to raise the block gas limit from the current 36 million toward a long-term goal of 100 million gas per block, potentially by the Fusaka upgrade. Validators are advised to upgrade their clients and adopt the new 45 million gas limit.
The Ethereum Name Service (ENS) launched the ENSv2 Hub, a central resource for information about the upcoming ENSv2 upgrade and the rollout of its Namechain Layer 2 network. The hub offers key resources, presentations, and technical updates. ENSv2 is an overhaul of the current ENS architecture. ENSv2 introduces a new registry, new smart contracts, new applications, and the Namechain L2. Namechain will leverage Linea’s ZK tech stack. The upgrade aims to extend core .eth domain activities to Layer 2. The v2 deployment will bring lower costs, improved interoperability, reduced friction, and faster transaction finality.
OpenZeppelin announced that it is sunsetting Defender, its security SaaS platform designed to help manage, monitor, and safeguard smart contracts. Defender will officially shut down on July 1, 2026, one year from now. In the coming weeks, OpenZeppelin will release migration guides to help developers transition. The company cited its focus on open-source developer tools, stating that open-source tools will outpace any hosted SaaS alternatives.
Chainlink introduces ACE
Velodrome launches Superswaps
OpenAI stock token on Arbitrum
Lido approves Dual Governance
ethOS opens dGEN1 redemptions
28 Ethereum ecosystem updates
Spark Protocol Ignite goes live
BitMine $250m ETH strategy
Tom Lee’s MicroStrategy for Ethereum
SharpLink Gaming buys 1,989 ETH
Vitalik on digital ID risks
RedStone RWA report
Cannes Day 1 highlights
Vitalik on Robinhood livestream
Tomasz Stańczak Edge interview
Joseph Lubin on Bloomberg
Disclaimer: Content is for informational purposes only, not endorsement or investment advice. The accuracy of information is not guaranteed.
