Sometimes when I check new Web3 networks, I try to look past the marketing and think about how things would actually work if thousands of users joined at the same time. It’s easy for any infrastructure to look smooth when activity is low, but real pressure usually tells a different story.
While going through a few projects recently, Fogo stood out to me because it doesn’t seem to be built only for early-stage performance. From what I understand so far, the aim is to support builders in a way where apps don’t suddenly slow down once adoption starts picking up.
For developers, that kind of reliability matters more than headline numbers. Nobody wants to spend weeks building something only to keep fixing network-related issues later.
If the foundation underneath remains stable, developers can spend more time making the experience better for users instead of constantly stressing over technical limits as the ecosystem starts to expand.

FOGOUSDT
Perp
0.02797
-10.92%