Recently, modular blockchain has been especially popular, and Walrus Protocol has attracted a lot of attention with its unique execution layer architecture design. Everyone is asking: can this solution truly provide developers with flexible and efficient tools to promote the iteration of Web3 infrastructure?
From a technical perspective, Walrus's approach is to separate execution and settlement processes, allowing on-chain applications to be more customizable through modular splitting, which also improves performance. Its native token $WAL mainly handles network governance and resource allocation. However, competition in this space is fierce, and future performance will depend on actual adoption and whether the ecosystem can truly take off.
If this protocol can continue to attract developers and establish stable use cases, it has the opportunity to gain a foothold in the modular infrastructure field. But ultimately, whether the technology can be implemented, market acceptance, and the overall trend of the crypto market are all key factors.
Key points to watch: how ecosystem collaborations are progressing, on-chain data performance of the mainnet, and whether developer activity is keeping pace.
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ChainSpy
· 01-12 20:39
Modularization is indeed hot right now, but whether Walrus can stand out from the crowd is still a question... With such intense competition, having a good architecture alone isn't enough.
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FunGibleTom
· 01-11 00:51
The concept of modularization has been popular for so long. Can Walrus really come up with something different... To be honest, it still depends on whether the ecosystem can take off.
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GasFeeTears
· 01-11 00:48
Modular trading has been around for a while. Will Walrus come up with something real this time? Or will it be another PowerPoint governance?
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PonziDetector
· 01-11 00:29
With the modular track so competitive, can Walrus really break through... It still seems to depend on the ecosystem implementation.
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StableCoinKaren
· 01-11 00:28
Modularization is coming again... It depends on whether the ecosystem can really take off; just having architecture design is not enough.
Recently, modular blockchain has been especially popular, and Walrus Protocol has attracted a lot of attention with its unique execution layer architecture design. Everyone is asking: can this solution truly provide developers with flexible and efficient tools to promote the iteration of Web3 infrastructure?
From a technical perspective, Walrus's approach is to separate execution and settlement processes, allowing on-chain applications to be more customizable through modular splitting, which also improves performance. Its native token $WAL mainly handles network governance and resource allocation. However, competition in this space is fierce, and future performance will depend on actual adoption and whether the ecosystem can truly take off.
If this protocol can continue to attract developers and establish stable use cases, it has the opportunity to gain a foothold in the modular infrastructure field. But ultimately, whether the technology can be implemented, market acceptance, and the overall trend of the crypto market are all key factors.
Key points to watch: how ecosystem collaborations are progressing, on-chain data performance of the mainnet, and whether developer activity is keeping pace.