Ethereum at a Crossroads as Vitalik Buterin Pushes for Radical Simplification

Ethereum’s future may depend on cutting protocol bloat and complexity to protect trust, security, and stability.

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is warning that the network may be getting too complex. He says added layers and features could affect the protocol’s security and make it harder to maintain over time. His latest comments show a push toward simpler design as Ethereum moves into its next stage.

Buterin Warns of Risks Tied to Ethereum Growth

Vitalik Buterin says trustlessness is not only about strong cryptography. It also depends on whether people can understand how a protocol works. In his view, even a highly decentralized network loses its value if only a small group of experts can fully explain and control it.

As codebases grow larger and rely on complex mathematical tools, understanding shifts away from everyday users. Even experienced developers may need specialists to explain how a blockchain actually works.

An important, and perenially underrated, aspect of “trustlessness”, “passing the walkaway test” and “self-sovereignty” is protocol simplicity.

Even if a protocol is super decentralized with hundreds of thousands of nodes, and it has 49% byzantine fault tolerance, and nodes fully… pic.twitter.com/kvzkg11M3c

— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) January 18, 2026

Reliance on a small group of experts weakens trust. It also undermines what Buterin calls the “walkaway test.” If current client teams stepped away, new teams would face major hurdles rebuilding software at the same level due to deep technical complexity.

Self-sovereignty also takes a hit. A network designed for its users falls short when even skilled participants cannot review or fully understand how it works.

Buterin also stated that the network’s security is affected because every new feature adds more interactions to the blockchain. As such, each interaction increases the chance of errors or failures. Over time, complexity itself turns into a risk.

Difficulty of Removing Features Fuels Protocol Bloat

Concerns also extend to how protocol changes are evaluated. Ethereum development often favors backward compatibility, which makes adding features easier than removing them. Over time, that approach leads to steady bloat. Short-term gains may look appealing, but Buterin warns that they can damage the goal of building infrastructure meant to last for generations.

He believes Ethereum needs a clear process not only for adding ideas, but also for removing or simplifying them. Without a formal method for cutting excess, complexity becomes permanent. Protocol changes should be judged not just on usefulness today, but on how they affect long-term clarity and durability.

Questions also surround how protocol changes are evaluated. According to Buterin, Ethereum development often prioritizes backward compatibility, which makes adding features easier than removing them. Over time, these new features could lead to gradual bloat.

Even though short-term improvements may seem beneficial, he warns that they can undermine the goal of building infrastructure that lasts for decades.

He further argues that Ethereum needs a clear process for removal and simplification, not just additions. Without a formal way to cut excess, complexity stays forever. Protocol changes should be measured by long-term stability and clarity, not only immediate utility.

Buterin Calls for Formal Protocol Simplification

To counter this trend, Buterin proposes an explicit “simplification” or “garbage collection” function within Ethereum’s development process. He outlines three main goals, which include:

  • Reducing the total lines of protocol code as much as possible.
  • Limiting reliance on deeply complex technical dependencies, favoring simpler primitives such as hash functions.
  • Increase the number of invariants, core rules that the protocol can always rely on.

Recent upgrades show how invariants help. Removing the self-destruct function restricted how storage can change, which made client behavior easier to reason about. Transaction gas caps added predictable limits on computation, helping scaling efforts and parallel processing.

Garbage collection can happen in small steps, such as adjusting gas fees to better reflect actual resource use. It can also occur through major shifts, such as moving from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake. Upcoming efforts around Lean consensus designs may open room to fix several long-standing issues at once.

Ethereum Considers Moving Complex Features Out of Core

Another idea by Buterin is to separate rarely used but complex features from the core protocol. Those features could be implemented as smart contracts rather than mandatory rules. As a result, new client developers will focus solely on the essential parts.

Buterin also suggests easing the burden on client teams.  Older protocol versions could run in parallel instead of requiring constant backward support. Over time, he hopes Ethereum’s pace of change will slow.

He views the network’s first fifteen years as an experimental stage, during which many ideas were tested, and not all proved useful. According to the co-founder, the next phase should focus on trimming what no longer serves the core mission.

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