# So...what merged? **Published by:** [Mille Codex](https://paragraph.com/@millecodex/) **Published on:** 2022-09-18 **URL:** https://paragraph.com/@millecodex/so-what-merged ## Content So…what merged?This past Thursday there was a noteworthy event in crypto. The Ethereum main chain was upgraded from a proof-of-work consensus algorithm to a proof-of-stake one. Like a train switching from an old well-worn track to a shiny new one it went seamlessly which is a big win for Ethereum, but also for open source developers who had been planning the transition for the past seven years.Vitalik gave a primer on PoS Ethereum at the Merge partyThe actual merger was between the main Ethereum chain as we knew it and a separate, newer chain called Beacon that has been running in parallel for the past 20 months. The Beacon portion was the proof-of-stake side and until the merge had not processed any transactions. Now there is just a single chain run by validators instead of miners requiring significantly less computing equipment (read electricity). Rather than miners collecting the block rewards, they are now issued to validators. And although you will need 32 ETH, or about $80,000 NZD, to be a validator, you can get exposure to the block reward yield—previously only accessible to miners—by joining a staking pool.The Merge roadmapBut there’s a lesson on human adaptation here too. Just because the new version of Ethereum doesn’t need as much electricity in the form of GPU mining hardware, doesn’t mean people will turn off their mining equipment and call it a day. An old foe has recently surged in hashrate so that now if you account for Ethereum Classic (ETC) the power usage hasn’t dropped as much as advertised.Ethereum classic is the early winner gaining unused hashrateJust as people are incentivised to use their graphics cards to mine whatever is profitable, others may be incentivised to buy, invest, stake, and hold their ETH. With this network upgrade the total supply of ethereum tokens (ETH) has started to decrease because there is 80-90% less ETH being issued as well as a prior upgrade that burns a base fee in each transaction. Money nerds call this a deflationary supply. Meantime, some are saying The Merge was anticlimactic, meaning nothing broke (yet), others are saying that Bitcoin just lost a major proof-of-work competitor. Vitalik says proof-of-stake Ethereum is not a security because it has no voting capabilities (and therefore is a commodity), while Gary Gensler says it could be a security (and therefore regulated like one). To no one’s surprise, there are strongly opinionated voices both in favour of the upgrade and opposed to it. Those in favour say it's more secure due to finality checkpointing, more financially inclusive due to staking rewards, and better environmentally. Those opposed point to wealth distribution saying the Ethereum founders got rich through their pre-mine and now proof-of-stake is a rich-get-richer scheme allowing privileged folks to invest in Ethereum staking. Others dislike the seemingly centralised manner in which the network decides on upgrades and can enact changes to the code, thereby changing the rules of the game.Let's Fucking Go right between the eyesEither way, you’ll have to wait for future upgrades for fees to fall and performance to improve; stay tuned in 2023 for sharding and The Surge which should dramatically improve network throughput. Investors will be on the lookout for the Shanghai upgrade which will allow people to withdraw their staked ether. And there is a lot of it. About 12% of the supply, or around $21B USD has bet on Ethereum maintaining its smart contract platform edge. ## Publication Information - [Mille Codex](https://paragraph.com/@millecodex/): Publication homepage - [All Posts](https://paragraph.com/@millecodex/): More posts from this publication - [RSS Feed](https://api.paragraph.com/blogs/rss/@millecodex): Subscribe to updates - [Twitter](https://twitter.com/Japple): Follow on Twitter