Halving block times on opBNB shifts the focus from raw throughput to user experience, especially for latency-sensitive DeFi apps.
BNB Chain’s Layer 2 network opBNB completed its Fourier mainnet hard fork on January 7 to cut block times in half.
The upgrade marks a meaningful step in BNB Chain’s scaling push, improving transaction speed and reinforcing its position as one of the busiest blockchain ecosystems in terms of user activity.
Fourier Hard Fork Halves Block Times on opBNB
The Fourier upgrade went live at 03:00 UTC on January 7, according to an announcement from BNB Chain developers posted on X the same day. The hard fork reduced opBNB’s block interval from 500 milliseconds to 250 milliseconds, a change confirmed shortly after by Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao, who noted that the network completed the upgrade smoothly.
For developers and users, the shorter block time means faster transaction confirmations and lower latency for decentralized applications built on opBNB. The network is BNB Chain’s Layer 2 scaling solution, built using Optimism’s OP Stack, and it is designed to handle high-throughput activity while keeping fees low.
Node operators were instructed to upgrade to supported client versions ahead of the hard fork, including op-node v0.5.5 and op-geth v0.5.9. The Fourier upgrade follows earlier opBNB improvements such as the Fjord hard fork in September 2024, which adjusted Layer 1 fee calculations, and the Wright upgrade in August 2024 that introduced gasless transaction support.
The timing is notable, given that BNB Chain continues to lead other Layer 1 networks in monthly active addresses, with Token Terminal data showing about 56 million active users, well ahead of NEAR Protocol and Solana.
Market Reaction Amid Competitive Landscape
BNB’s price showed a measured response following the upgrade. At the time of writing, it was trading around $917, up about 1% in the last 24 hours. The asset has increased by almost 6% over the past week, with a two-week gain of about 10%. Meanwhile, monthly performance remains modest at around 2%.
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Although the token is still up more than 25% over the past year, it was recently overtaken by its Ripple rival after XRP jumped from $1.86 to just under $2.30, currently, pushing its market cap past $138 billion compared to BNB’s $126 billion.
The Fourier upgrade also fits into a wider industry trend. Ethereum activated its Fusaka hard fork in December 2025, boosting data availability and lowering Layer 2 costs, while Vitalik Buterin recently stated that live upgrades such as PeerDAS and early-stage ZK-EVMs have reshaped Ethereum’s scalability model. Against that backdrop, BNB Chain’s focus on execution speed at both Layer 1 and Layer 2 shows a parallel effort to stay competitive.
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