A while ago, I was overwhelmed by storage issues. Cloud drives either charge exorbitant renewal fees or frequently trigger risk controls. It wasn't until I encountered Walrus Protocol that I understood what a true Web3 storage solution looks like.
This project definitely has some real skills. Less than a year since its mainnet launch, it has already stored 869TB of data—put another way, enough to hold the entire Netflix media library plus some. The system reliably runs 14 million data blocks, which in itself demonstrates the reliability of decentralized storage. Even a16z specifically mentioned this project in their recent 2026 crypto trend report, showing industry recognition.
On a practical level, there are quite a few ways to play. Content creators can package their materials into NFTs for direct on-chain transactions; AI training teams can use the Quilt protocol to aggregate fragmented files, reducing storage costs by 70%; even blockchain game players are using it to store encrypted game state data, fundamentally avoiding the risk of centralized server outages.
Recent activities have also been quite frequent. The exchange is running a creator support program with task reward pools to participate in, and the SDK toolchain is continuously iterating and upgrading. In the storage sector, Walrus has indeed demonstrated several differentiated advantages.
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ChainWanderingPoet
· 21m ago
869TB sounds impressive, but I'm more concerned about when the cost curve will truly break through the cloud storage business model... After all, what happened to the last project that claimed it would revolutionize everything?
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ChainSherlockGirl
· 1h ago
869TB sounds impressive, but the stability of data blocks is indeed no exaggeration; a16z has even called it out, indicating it's not just hype.
A 70% cost reduction? It depends on whether the actual operation matches this figure; otherwise, it's just on paper.
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0xSunnyDay
· 01-11 02:51
869TB sounds impressive, but how much of it can actually be used... However, a 70% cost reduction is indeed tempting.
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LiquidityHunter
· 01-11 02:36
ngl this is exactly what I've been wanting, the cloud storage setup is really outrageous
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ForkTongue
· 01-11 02:35
869TB sounds impressive, but is it stable in actual operation? I always feel like Web3 storage is just bragging.
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BrokeBeans
· 01-11 02:26
869TB? Walrus, I believe this number. Much more reliable than projects bragged about by some influencers.
A while ago, I was overwhelmed by storage issues. Cloud drives either charge exorbitant renewal fees or frequently trigger risk controls. It wasn't until I encountered Walrus Protocol that I understood what a true Web3 storage solution looks like.
This project definitely has some real skills. Less than a year since its mainnet launch, it has already stored 869TB of data—put another way, enough to hold the entire Netflix media library plus some. The system reliably runs 14 million data blocks, which in itself demonstrates the reliability of decentralized storage. Even a16z specifically mentioned this project in their recent 2026 crypto trend report, showing industry recognition.
On a practical level, there are quite a few ways to play. Content creators can package their materials into NFTs for direct on-chain transactions; AI training teams can use the Quilt protocol to aggregate fragmented files, reducing storage costs by 70%; even blockchain game players are using it to store encrypted game state data, fundamentally avoiding the risk of centralized server outages.
Recent activities have also been quite frequent. The exchange is running a creator support program with task reward pools to participate in, and the SDK toolchain is continuously iterating and upgrading. In the storage sector, Walrus has indeed demonstrated several differentiated advantages.