Tearing open the veil of low fees, enterprise-level compliance is the ultimate trump card in this network
To be honest, this recent wave of rampant bull market has raised everyone's appetite, and everyone is watching which new concept can double in a day, completely ignoring the slow-moving things that focus on enterprise implementation. I looked at their recent flirtation with traditional payment giants and suddenly realized that what retail investors fear most is having too small a vision, focusing only on the minor fluctuations while missing the reconstruction of underlying business logic. For us small investors, paying those few dollars or even dozens of dollars in miner fees on the chain every day has long become numb, but traditional enterprises are not foolish. When you discuss asset on-chain with multinational brands, the first question they ask is whether costs can be locked in. Those fees that fluctuate wildly with the price of coins are called uncontrollable risks in the business world. The low consumption mechanism they are implementing has directly torn apart the veil of most public chains on the market. This is something that truly understands real demands. Coupled with that built-in review compliance logic, it is equivalent to building a high-speed toll station with security checks between virtual ledgers and real assets. Personally, I feel that these people have no intention of snatching retail investors in the existing casino; they want to be the underlying plumbers for the circulation of traditional assets. I tried to simulate a high-frequency small-scale chain payment in a test environment, and it was terrifyingly stable; that kind of smoothness without slippage and network congestion expectations is absolutely crushing. However, this model also has a fatal flaw, which is that it must rely on extremely high concurrency to run the economic model. If real daily active users do not rise, that tiny amount of consumption cannot form effective value feedback. The biggest problem now is that the marketing is too laid-back; the technical documentation is written more rigorously than academic papers, but in the current environment where bad money drives out good, not engaging in emotional marketing really puts one at a disadvantage. I hope these geeks can wake up soon and not play their good hand quietly, after all, good wine fears deep alleys. $VANRY #Vanar @Vanarchain