From atomic-scale transistors to chips made of light — here is what comes after the 2nm revolution, and why it matters for everything from your smartphone to artificial general intelligence. Photo by Laura Ockel on Unsplash In Q4 2025, TSMC confirmed volume production of its N2 node. At 2nm, transistor gates are approximately 10 silicon atoms wide. That is not a metaphor for "very small" — it is a regime where quantum tunnelling, variability at the atomic scale, and statistical dopant fluctuations are no longer edge cases. They are the design constraints. The engineering community has spent decades treating Moore's Law as a roadmap. What comes next is not one road. It is six, running in parallel. 1. Gate-All-Around (GAA) Transistors FinFETs gave the gate three sides of control over the channel. GAA wraps it around all four sides of horizontally stacked silicon nanosheets — typically 5–8 ribbons, each 5nm thick, separated by high-k dielectric.…