Recently, I've been hearing quite a bit of discussion among industry insiders about the current state of the Cosmos ecosystem, and the tone sounds somewhat pessimistic. A senior industry figure stated bluntly that the Cosmos ecosystem is on the verge of collapse.
Looking at the project level, the problems become even more apparent. Projects like Penumbra have already chosen to shut down; more projects, though still operational, have entered maintenance mode, with their original resources and energy redirected to other platforms like Osmosis; and projects like Noble have simply left Cosmos altogether to seek alternative paths.
Behind this series of changes lies a declining ecosystem appeal and projects reassessing their development direction. An ecosystem that once brimmed with promise now faces a domino effect of project departures. For projects and investors still holding on to Cosmos, this is undoubtedly a warning signal.
Recently, I've been hearing quite a bit of discussion among industry insiders about the current state of the Cosmos ecosystem, and the tone sounds somewhat pessimistic. A senior industry figure stated bluntly that the Cosmos ecosystem is on the verge of collapse.
Looking at the project level, the problems become even more apparent. Projects like Penumbra have already chosen to shut down; more projects, though still operational, have entered maintenance mode, with their original resources and energy redirected to other platforms like Osmosis; and projects like Noble have simply left Cosmos altogether to seek alternative paths.
Behind this series of changes lies a declining ecosystem appeal and projects reassessing their development direction. An ecosystem that once brimmed with promise now faces a domino effect of project departures. For projects and investors still holding on to Cosmos, this is undoubtedly a warning signal.