Fogo talks a lot about execution quality, but speed alone doesn’t attract liquidity. What actually matters is how easy it is to move capital in and out. That’s why choosing Wormhole as the native bridge is bigger than it sounds.
The first real test of any new chain isn’t block time it’s the first transfer. If bridging feels confusing or risky, most people just leave. By giving users one clear, familiar on-ramp, Fogo reduces that friction early.
But a bridge is also an exit. Liquidity can leave as easily as it arrives. So the real question isn’t whether funds show up it’s whether traders decide to keep capital there. That’s what turns attention into adoption.
