The word "modularization" sounds pretty mysterious, but for us end-users, honestly, it boils down to two things: First, "which chain to use" isn't as important as it used to be; just click in your wallet, cross over, and later, whoever handles consensus is responsible for the data. Most of the time, you don't even want to care; Second, the experience is more like switching to a wider road—cheaper, faster, and sometimes a bit more fragmented—whether you're swapping tokens or providing liquidity, it might be spread across several layers, saving on fees, but with more bridges, ordering, and service providers, it's harder to see at a glance who's responsible when something goes wrong. Recently, I watched demos of AI Agents automatically placing orders and interacting on-chain, talking up a storm, but what I care more about is how they manage private keys and how they handle authorization. Modularization breaks down the steps, and security is broken apart too. Don't just focus on "faster and cheaper." That's all for now.

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