#fogo $FOGO @Fogo Official

Everyone keeps describing Fogo as “SVM + high performance.”

That’s fine. But speed alone doesn’t change markets. Behavior does.

Right now, public dashboards show Fogo processing roughly ~450 TPS with ~40ms blocks and ~1–1.5s finality — meaning it’s operating far below any real throughput ceiling. So performance isn’t the bottleneck.

What is interesting is where the builder focus is going. Recent ecosystem activity shows engineering effort clustering around sessions — delegated execution and smoother UX flows.

And that’s the real story.

When users don’t have to sign every transaction… When fees can be abstracted or sponsored… When interaction feels continuous instead of episodic…

Usage patterns change.

Traders click more. Apps experiment more. Retention increases.

But here’s the tradeoff no one talks about:

If apps become the primary sponsors of execution, then fee demand shifts from “distributed user activity” to “concentrated app-level flow.” That can boost growth early — but it also means a few dominant apps may quietly control most economic activity on-chain.

So instead of asking “How fast is Fogo?” the better question is:

Who ends up paying for the chain’s activity — and how concentrated is that payer base?

If session-driven usage expands while fee payers remain diversified, Fogo builds a durable moat.

If not, it risks becoming high-performance infrastructure with narrow economic ownership.

Speed is table stakes.

Behavioral economics is the real battleground.