The word “modularization” sounds pretty mysterious. Put plainly, the most intuitive changes for ordinary people are probably just two: lower costs for switching chains, and more ways to get into trouble… In the past, you’d pick one chain and just put up with congestion and high prices; now there are “entry points” everywhere. With a bunch of networks in your wallet, if you click the wrong one, you end up having to go to the bridge to retrieve things—your experience still isn’t any more worry-free than choosing a ride-hailing platform by platform.



Recently, L2s have been trading shots over TPS, fees, and subsidies. It’s a bit like a mall opening with a voucher giveaway battle—lively enough, but in the end, the ones paying the bill are still attention and operational risk. If modularization can make the whole “I just want to transfer / do a swap—don’t get me stuck, don’t make it costly” thing stable, then it’ll be useful. But if it turns into chasing which chain has more subsidies or which chain is faster every day… I’d rather be slower—no cutting in line. Anyway, I’m not the type to be thrown into emotional mode about this.
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