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I've always believed that what truly holds people back in Web3 is never "whether it can be done," but "how to use it."
You'll notice a very practical issue: currently, this entire interaction logic assumes users are "semi-professional players."
Wallets need to be understood, Gas fees calculated, slippage checked, cross-chain routes chosen... For outsiders, this isn't an experience; it's a deterrent.
That's why many projects desperately pile on features, but user numbers never really grow. The fundamental reason is here — the entry point is too complicated.
And @Synvine's $SVT is taking a different approach: not adding more features, but rewriting the entry logic.
What it's doing, in simple terms, is a layer of "translation":
Repackaging complex on-chain operations with AI + natural language.
You no longer need to click through step-by-step; just say what you want to do — transfer, swap, stake, borrow — and the system will break it down and execute it.
The underlying system is still the same multi-chain + routing + risk control system, but for users, all of this is "hidden."
This change may not seem explosive, but once it works, it will be very impactful:
👉 Users no longer need to understand Web3, just "know how to speak"
👉 Operations shift from "tool-oriented" to "intent-oriented"
Many people like to focus on new protocols and narratives, but honestly —
What really determines whether a project can break into the mainstream is often the experience, not the technology itself.
If this layer is unlocked, the impact won't be limited to a single track but will influence the entire usage paradigm.