The Sepolia testnet of Ethereum is gearing up for the merge dress rehearsal, as Beacon Chain goes live on it.
Once it ends up merging with its dedicated Beacon Chain, the Sepolia testnet will begin reaching consensus through the utilization of the Proof-of-Stake (PoS) consensus model rather than Proof-of-Work (PoW).
This will ultimately lead to a lot of data on what might happen when the Ethereum mainnet performs the merge. The official date of the Sepolia merge is not yet revealed.
Bringing the Merge to Sepolia is required to guarantee that the new upgrade functions successfully on all testnets before going live on mainnet in early August.
The Ethereum development team stated on June 8th that the Merge has performed well on the Ropsten testnet completing its first dress rehearsal.
Sepolia testnet debuted during October 2021. In April, Tim Beiko, one of Ethereum’s primary developers, stated that the Ropsten testnet will be phased out over time and replaced by Sepolia.
As a result, projects that use Ropsten to launch apps are recommended to move to Sepolia to avoid unwanted volatility.
The official Ethereum mainnet merge date has been pushed back multiple times. It is presently scheduled to be completed by August 2022, but due to a separate delay in the difficulty bomb, that date may be pushed back much further.
It will create the Consensus Layer, previously called the Ethereum 2.0, once it is finished.
The difficulty bomb is a feature of the Ethereum network that disincentivizes miners who use physical devices by dramatically increasing the difficulty of generating a new block.
The switch to Proof-of-Stake (PoS) could potentially reduce Ethereum’s energy consumption by 99.9%.