The large-scale application of Web3 has always been stuck on the user experience barrier. Mnemonics, Gas fees, cross-chain bridging—these are insurmountable for ordinary users.
The idea of Generalized Abstraction can completely change this situation. Addressing it directly at the L1 layer, making the complexity of Web3 completely invisible. Users won't feel anything, but the underlying magic is all running behind the scenes.
This is the next step in infrastructure. When a billion users enter Web3, they won't know what is happening behind the scenes—and they don't need to. Interactions will be as natural as using the internet, with all technical details abstracted away.
From this perspective, L1 solutions that simplify user pathways are the true game changers.
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ChainPoet
· 18h ago
You're right, but the real challenge is making this system actually run.
It sounds great, but back when we had a billion users, we didn't even know if we'd still be around to see it.
I'm just waiting for the moment to eliminate the mnemonic phrase.
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YieldWhisperer
· 18h ago
That's right, but I still think it's a bit optimistic. The real challenge isn't technical abstraction, but getting the project teams to actually use it.
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Anon4461
· 18h ago
That's right, it is indeed too complicated now, and ordinary people can't get in at all.
However, I still have some doubts. Can L1 really solve everything completely? It feels like there are always new pitfalls.
It sounds very promising, but it depends on who can actually make it happen.
This idea is correct, but it will be very difficult to execute.
Abstraction is good, but I'm afraid it might just be a concept that outweighs reality.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 18h ago
You're absolutely right; these complexities should be hidden away, users really shouldn't have to know about them.
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Another bunch of theories. There are still too few projects that can truly implement them.
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Generalized abstraction sounds good, but it still feels far from practical implementation.
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Oh, with a billion users coming, can our chain still run smoothly? Haha.
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I'm just worried that in the end, this set of technologies will be monopolized by a big company.
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Exactly, right now the barrier is too high, and ordinary people come in looking confused.
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Is L1 solving this problem reliably? It seems more like it should start with interaction design.
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Damn, both infrastructure and abstraction again. Just solving Gas fees would be good enough.
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This idea is correct, but who will do it? It feels like everyone is just making big promises now.
The large-scale application of Web3 has always been stuck on the user experience barrier. Mnemonics, Gas fees, cross-chain bridging—these are insurmountable for ordinary users.
The idea of Generalized Abstraction can completely change this situation. Addressing it directly at the L1 layer, making the complexity of Web3 completely invisible. Users won't feel anything, but the underlying magic is all running behind the scenes.
This is the next step in infrastructure. When a billion users enter Web3, they won't know what is happening behind the scenes—and they don't need to. Interactions will be as natural as using the internet, with all technical details abstracted away.
From this perspective, L1 solutions that simplify user pathways are the true game changers.