Walrus's ambitions go far beyond distributed storage. Leveraging the scalability of the Sui blockchain, it is evolving into a key hub for Web3 infrastructure.
On the technical level, the advancement of Pilotfish's sharding technology is crucial. Once implemented, Walrus will be able to handle larger-scale file storage and data interactions. What does this mean? It means it has the potential to become the data availability layer for rollups, differentiating itself from projects like Celestia.
On the ecosystem level, things become even more interesting. Walrus already has the potential to support RWA (Real World Asset) tokenized storage. In other words, cross-border trade documents, intellectual property, offline assets, and more could all be connected through Walrus via on-chain and off-chain data channels.
The Sui ecosystem itself is also rapidly expanding—assets like WBTC, LBTC, and others have already been integrated. In this broader context, the WAL token will connect storage, trading, governance, cross-chain, and other scenarios, gradually becoming an indispensable value token within the ecosystem.
Ultimately, Walrus is building a decentralized infrastructure covering multiple fields with "security + privacy + efficiency" at its core. In the wave of the digital economy, it has the potential to become a truly Web3 solution capable of competing with traditional cloud services.
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PerpetualLonger
· 19h ago
I just want to ask, can this thing really beat Celestia? It sounds so impressive, why hasn't it taken off yet?
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AllInDaddy
· 22h ago
If sharding technology really gets implemented, Walrus competing with Celestia would be interesting.
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SignatureCollector
· 22h ago
I've been optimistic about Walrus for a long time. Is it finally taking off now?
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AirdropHuntress
· 22h ago
After research and analysis, I still need to review WAL's tokenomics design. Historical data shows that similar project teams tend to overpromise. Don't be greedy; it's recommended to pay attention to the risks.
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PanicSeller
· 22h ago
It seems that Walrus really wants to do something big this time, not just simple storage.
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SlowLearnerWang
· 22h ago
It's both distributed storage and data availability layer—sounds incredibly impressive... But to be honest, does Pilotfish really get implemented?
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GamefiHarvester
· 22h ago
Feels like Walrus is telling stories again, about RWA, data layer, ecosystem hub... sounds quite grand, but we still have to wait for actual implementation.
Walrus's ambitions go far beyond distributed storage. Leveraging the scalability of the Sui blockchain, it is evolving into a key hub for Web3 infrastructure.
On the technical level, the advancement of Pilotfish's sharding technology is crucial. Once implemented, Walrus will be able to handle larger-scale file storage and data interactions. What does this mean? It means it has the potential to become the data availability layer for rollups, differentiating itself from projects like Celestia.
On the ecosystem level, things become even more interesting. Walrus already has the potential to support RWA (Real World Asset) tokenized storage. In other words, cross-border trade documents, intellectual property, offline assets, and more could all be connected through Walrus via on-chain and off-chain data channels.
The Sui ecosystem itself is also rapidly expanding—assets like WBTC, LBTC, and others have already been integrated. In this broader context, the WAL token will connect storage, trading, governance, cross-chain, and other scenarios, gradually becoming an indispensable value token within the ecosystem.
Ultimately, Walrus is building a decentralized infrastructure covering multiple fields with "security + privacy + efficiency" at its core. In the wave of the digital economy, it has the potential to become a truly Web3 solution capable of competing with traditional cloud services.