
Polygon crypto activated its Giugliano hardfork on mainnet at block 85,268,500 on April 8, providing a 2-second reduction in transaction finality through a mechanism that allows block producers to announce blocks earlier in the confirmation pipeline. The Polygon Crypto Foundation confirmed that the upgrade went live around 2:00 p.m. UTC – on time and with no reported downtime.
This 2 second cut is not cosmetic. For real-world payment applications and asset platforms running on Polygon PoS, faster finality directly compresses settlement risk and reduces the confirmation latency that separates blockchain UX from traditional financial infrastructure.
- What is this : The Giugliano hardfork (PIP-83) is an upgrade to the Polygon PoS mainnet activating at block 85,268,500, targeting faster transaction finality and updated fee infrastructure.
- Technical change: Block producers can now announce blocks earlier in the cycle, reducing finality by 2 seconds – validated on the Amoy testnet before mainnet deployment.
- Tariff infrastructure: Fee settings are now integrated directly into block headers, with new RPC endpoints for fee data – a structural change for wallets and developer tools.
- Node requirement: All node operators must be running Bor v2.7.0 or Erigon v3.5.0 or higher; Nodes from earlier versions will no longer be subject to consensus at the activation block level.
- What to watch: Real-world finality metrics post-activation will determine whether the 2-second testnet win holds up at mainnet scale – and whether Polygon closes the UX gap with its faster L2 competitors.
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What Giugliano Really Changes for Polygon Crypto – and Why the Finality Mechanism Matters
The main change to Giugliano is architectural: block producers on Polygon PoS can now report block availability earlier in the slot cycle, reducing the time validators must wait before treating a block as confirmed. On the Amoy testnet, this translated to a finality improvement of 2 seconds – a measurable delta, not a rounding error, when the base confirmation window is already measured in seconds.
The upgrade also integrates fee parameters directly into block headers and introduces new RPC support for fee data.
This distinction is important for developers: wallets and dApps can now query fee terms directly from block data rather than reconstructing them via separate API calls, simplifying gas estimation logic and reducing the surface area for fee-related errors at the application layer.
Giugliano is not a throughput upgrade, it’s a latency and infrastructure upgrade. The Gigagas roadmap to 100,000 TPS remains a separate, longer-term effort. What Giugliano offers is a tighter confirmation loop and cleaner fee data pipelines – fundamental plumbing on which Gigagas’ scaling work will depend.
The upgrade also features a specific backstory. Giugliano is officially reintroducing PIP-66, a set of changes that were bundled in Bhilai’s previous hardfork (PIP-63), but rolled back after triggering unspecified network behavior issues during deployment.
The Amoy testnet run on March 23 on block 35,573,500 served as a final validation gate before the mainnet, and Wednesday’s clean activation suggests that these earlier issues have been resolved.
Compared to the broader L2 landscape, the gap closed by Giugliano is real but context-dependent. Optimistic rollups like Arbitrum and Optimism feature 7-day challenge windows that dwarf any measure of PoS finality. ZK-based rollups achieve near-instant cryptographic finality, but at higher proof costs.
Polygon PoS belongs to a different architectural category – a sidechain with its own set of validators – and Giugliano reinforces its native purpose without altering these fundamental tradeoffs.
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