eth_getBlockReceipts - MegaETH RPC Method
Return every transaction receipt in a block on MegaETH. Useful for indexers, analytics pipelines, and event backfills across high-frequency trading, real-time gaming, instant payments, and latency-sensitive applications.
Returns all transaction receipts for a block on MegaETH. This is more efficient than calling eth_getTransactionReceipt once per transaction when you already know the target block.
Why MegaETH? Build on the first real-time blockchain with sub-millisecond latency and 100,000+ TPS with sub-millisecond transaction streaming with 100,000+ sustained TPS and full EVM compatibility.
When to Use This Method
eth_getBlockReceipts is useful for high-frequency DeFi developers, gaming studios, and teams building real-time applications:
- Indexer Backfills — Pull every receipt in a block with one request instead of looping over transaction hashes
- Event Collection — Scan all logs emitted by a block when building analytics or data pipelines
- Settlement Auditing — Verify every transaction outcome in a target block for high-frequency trading, real-time gaming, instant payments, and latency-sensitive applications
- Operational Debugging — Compare receipt-level gas usage, status, and logs across multiple transactions at once
Code Examples
Error Handling
| Error Code | Message | Description |
|---|---|---|
| -32602 | Invalid params | The block identifier is malformed |
| -32000 | Header not found | The referenced block does not exist on the node |
Related Methods
eth_getTransactionReceipt- Retrieve a single transaction receipteth_getBlockByHash- Retrieve the block object itselfeth_getBlockByNumber- Retrieve a block by number or tag
eth_getBlockByHash
Retrieve complete block data by block hash on MegaETH. Essential for high-frequency DeFi developers, gaming studios, and teams building real-time applications building on the first real-time blockchain with sub-millisecond latency and 100,000+ TPS.
eth_getBalance
Query account balance on MegaETH. Essential for wallet applications and high-frequency trading, real-time gaming, instant payments, and latency-sensitive applications on the first real-time blockchain with sub-millisecond latency and 100,000+ TPS.