The word "modular chain" sounds like taking apart Lego and selling it piece by piece…but for ordinary users, honestly, it boils down to two things: fewer "getting stuck" moments and less anxiety about "which chain am I actually using." In the past, congestion and slippage would suddenly amplify like life's errors; no matter how smart the routing, it couldn't save you. Now, execution, data, and consensus are separated, each doing its own thing, resulting in a more stable transaction experience, smoother confirmations, and wallet pop-ups that won't confuse you by switching between networks A and B.



But don't get too romantic about it. As chains increase, bridges, routing, and Gas entry points become more fragmented, and security pitfalls also become more scattered but safer… Recently, the airdrop season is back, with task platforms adopting anti-witchcraft + point systems, making the "grab some tokens" party look more like clocking in for work. I even suspect the biggest contribution of modularity is turning "where to do tasks" into a routing lesson. Anyway, I now remember one thing: focus less on chasing chains, and more on whether what you're doing can be cheaper and more stable—that's enough.
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