Actually, everyone understands that the most intuitive change for end users brought by modularization is not "more advanced architecture," but rather who you are settling with, how much you spend, and whether it’s smooth or laggy when you click a button. Recently, when I configure my portfolio, I pay more attention to whether the same wallet experience can switch seamlessly between different chains, whether transaction fees are like a lottery, and whether data is easily accessible… Anyway, it only counts if it feels like a normal app when using it.



Another small observation: In blockchain games, when inflation + studio + token price spiral collapse, many people blame the economic model. In fact, the underlying settlement being too expensive and slow can also amplify the death spiral. If modularization can separate execution and data to make it more stable, at least it won’t turn "playing games" into "waiting for confirmation." I’m still observing, for now, that’s how I see it.
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