#去中心化预测市场 Seeing the news about Polymarket building its own L2, I'm reminded of several similar cases I've observed in recent years. When an application grows large enough, it indeed faces a choice: continue relying on the underlying layer, or take control of its own destiny.
The prediction market track itself is quite interesting — it carries multiple functions of information aggregation, asset allocation, and risk hedging. But we need to calmly assess this infrastructure competition upgrade. On the surface, it's applications seeking independence, but the deeper logic is: when the value-added space of the underlying public chain is limited, leading applications will inevitably seek better costs, performance, and control.
For those of us with positions, this reminds us of one thing — the redistribution of power within the ecosystem often brings changes in liquidity and trading pairs. Whether on Polygon or the new L2, when participating in such innovative applications, positions must be restrained. Prediction markets themselves carry high-risk attributes, and combined with infrastructure variables, we need to maintain sufficient risk buffers.
In the long term, this kind of competition may be good for the entire ecosystem and will promote innovation. But in the short term, our strategy should be: observe rather than chase, small allocations rather than heavy positions, devote more energy to understanding the underlying logic rather than following the crowd. Market opportunities are always there, but only by staying robust enough can we wait for the one that truly belongs to us.
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#去中心化预测市场 Seeing the news about Polymarket building its own L2, I'm reminded of several similar cases I've observed in recent years. When an application grows large enough, it indeed faces a choice: continue relying on the underlying layer, or take control of its own destiny.
The prediction market track itself is quite interesting — it carries multiple functions of information aggregation, asset allocation, and risk hedging. But we need to calmly assess this infrastructure competition upgrade. On the surface, it's applications seeking independence, but the deeper logic is: when the value-added space of the underlying public chain is limited, leading applications will inevitably seek better costs, performance, and control.
For those of us with positions, this reminds us of one thing — the redistribution of power within the ecosystem often brings changes in liquidity and trading pairs. Whether on Polygon or the new L2, when participating in such innovative applications, positions must be restrained. Prediction markets themselves carry high-risk attributes, and combined with infrastructure variables, we need to maintain sufficient risk buffers.
In the long term, this kind of competition may be good for the entire ecosystem and will promote innovation. But in the short term, our strategy should be: observe rather than chase, small allocations rather than heavy positions, devote more energy to understanding the underlying logic rather than following the crowd. Market opportunities are always there, but only by staying robust enough can we wait for the one that truly belongs to us.