The progress of blockchain has never been achieved overnight. Looking at the projects Celer Network and Brevis, both are the handiwork of Dong Mo and his team, but the problems they aim to solve are constantly evolving—from initially being "usable" to now being "user-friendly."
Speaking of Celer Network ($CELR), it’s important to understand why it emerged in the first place. In the early days, blockchain faced an unavoidable issue: network congestion, exorbitant Gas fees, and poor user experience. Celer targets this pain point. Its core technology is state channel technology, which simply means moving a large number of transactions off-chain for processing, and only writing the final result back to the main chain. To give an analogy, it’s like building a dedicated tunnel outside the main road—cars no longer have to congest on the street, leading to faster transaction speeds and lower costs. This provided a survival space for early decentralized applications.
But Dong Mo’s team didn’t stop there. In their practice of operating Celer, they found that simply improving transmission efficiency was not enough. The blockchain ecosystem needs more than just speed; it also requires security, cross-chain interoperability, and a trust foundation. This led to the birth of Brevis ($BREV)—focused on cross-chain verification and information proof. If Celer is the "transportation layer," Brevis is like the "information authentication layer." Only by combining the two can a more complete infrastructure system be built. This is the true ambition of the team.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
LightningAllInHero
· 9h ago
Dong Mo's buddy is really holding a big move, upgrading from CELR's "Channel Knight" to BREV's "Validator," full of a strong sense of architecture, I buy into this logical chain.
View OriginalReply0
ProposalManiac
· 9h ago
State channels → Cross-chain verification. This iterative logic is actually about patching the vulnerabilities of the previous generation. What’s really interesting is how the two-layer infrastructure can form an incentive-compatible synergy; otherwise, they would just become two separate chains operating independently.
View OriginalReply0
VitaliksTwin
· 9h ago
Dong Mo, this guy is really leveling up from solving the gas fee hell to evolving into a cross-chain trust layer... He's got some skills.
View OriginalReply0
CounterIndicator
· 9h ago
Dong Mo's move is indeed bold, upgrading step by step from "usable" to "good to use"... But honestly, Brevis's liquidity is still a bit concerning right now.
View OriginalReply0
NftDeepBreather
· 9h ago
Dong Mo, this guy really knows his stuff, from making things functional to making them user-friendly, with a step-by-step approach... State channels + cross-chain verification, this is the right way to build infrastructure.
View OriginalReply0
PrivacyMaximalist
· 9h ago
Dong Mo, this guy is really competitive. He hasn't fully understood one project yet, and he's already starting another one.
View OriginalReply0
AllInDaddy
· 9h ago
Brother Dong Mo really has good vision, from escaping the gas fee hell to cross-chain trust foundations, the strategies are getting deeper and deeper.
The progress of blockchain has never been achieved overnight. Looking at the projects Celer Network and Brevis, both are the handiwork of Dong Mo and his team, but the problems they aim to solve are constantly evolving—from initially being "usable" to now being "user-friendly."
Speaking of Celer Network ($CELR), it’s important to understand why it emerged in the first place. In the early days, blockchain faced an unavoidable issue: network congestion, exorbitant Gas fees, and poor user experience. Celer targets this pain point. Its core technology is state channel technology, which simply means moving a large number of transactions off-chain for processing, and only writing the final result back to the main chain. To give an analogy, it’s like building a dedicated tunnel outside the main road—cars no longer have to congest on the street, leading to faster transaction speeds and lower costs. This provided a survival space for early decentralized applications.
But Dong Mo’s team didn’t stop there. In their practice of operating Celer, they found that simply improving transmission efficiency was not enough. The blockchain ecosystem needs more than just speed; it also requires security, cross-chain interoperability, and a trust foundation. This led to the birth of Brevis ($BREV)—focused on cross-chain verification and information proof. If Celer is the "transportation layer," Brevis is like the "information authentication layer." Only by combining the two can a more complete infrastructure system be built. This is the true ambition of the team.