Good evening everyone, I am Wuxue, not one to talk nonsense, let's have a serious chat about Vanar Chain and $VANRY.
First, let’s mention a point that is easily overlooked but I find particularly crucial—cost design. Vanar Chain states very clearly in the white paper: the goal is to reduce the transaction fee to the level of $0.0005 per transaction. This is not for aesthetics, but to make costs predictable, controllable, and calculable. Only with stable costs will real-world applications dare to go on-chain; otherwise, it’s all just empty talk.
Let's take a look at its technical core Neutron. Vanar Chain does not simply store hashes; instead, it converts files into chainable semantic Seeds, allowing data to truly become a 'comprehensible, verifiable' on-chain memory. The official repeatedly emphasizes the compression capability, claiming that large files can be compressed to several tens of KB, which I agree with—this is what we call usable on-chain storage, rather than just a concept presented in a PPT.
More importantly, myNeutron has already started running. Now you can use $VANRY to subscribe to services and directly save on-chain storage costs, which is a real payment scenario, not a future plan. Tokens here are not just for show; they serve as gas, and also take on roles in staking, governance, and ecological incentives, truly participating in the operation of the system.
If you look at industry reports again, the focus has started to shift to whether these products can bring real usage, indicating that the market's attention is moving from 'telling stories' to 'seeing results.'
To be honest, the technology roadmap of Vanar Chain is substantial, but whether it can achieve long-term value does not depend on emotions or how loud the shouting is; it only depends on two points: whether developers are continuously coming in and whether paying users can genuinely increase in number.
Wuxue's attitude has always been simple—listen less to the noise and pay more attention to on-chain activity and real payment data; this is the hardest ledger.