Walrus’s practical relevance is best illustrated through its ecosystem integrations with real-world projects. For instance, Chainbase, one of the largest omnichain data networks, selected Walrus to power decentralized data availability for over 220 blockchains and a 300TB dataset. This partnership shows that Walrus isn’t just theoretical — it is handling massive and heterogeneous data at scale. By integrating Walrus into Chainbase’s pipeline, developers gain access to verified blockchain data that is reliable, tamper-proof, and trustless.
Similarly, global IP brand Pudgy Penguins embraced Walrus to store and manage terabytes of media content (stickers, GIFs, and community assets) via Tusky, a user-focused storage layer built on top of Walrus. This adoption demonstrates how decentralized storage is becoming a backend for both developer-first platforms and consumer applications that need scalable, resilient content infrastructure.
These integrations reflect a broader trend: decentralized storage is moving from niche dApp experiments to foundational infrastructure that mainstream Web3 platforms trust for operational workloads.


