I’ve been thinking recently about the word “modularization”—what, exactly, does it change for end users? To put it plainly, when you just click confirm in your wallet, it still feels the same: the same lag, the same waiting, the same lack of confidence. The real change might be more invisible: which chain is responsible for producing blocks, which layer handles computation, and where data is stored. Once they’re separated, things like migration, maintenance, or even that shared anxiety before and after a major mainstream public chain upgrade seem like they’ll be “diverted,” so that if one part goes down, it won’t mean everyone collectively loses network access. But the trade-off is a little subtle too: with more bridges and more paths, when something goes wrong, you might not even know who you’re supposed to blame.


If the ecosystem really did move in unison because of rumors about hard forks, ordinary people might only notice that “the entry point has gotten a new shell,” but the spectrum of consensus would shift: attention no longer revolves around a single main chain, instead it slowly drifts around “which layer is more stable, which layer is cheaper.” In any case, what I care about more now is whether these drifts will eventually turn into the new default habit.
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