SIGN stands out because the core idea is actually strong.
You verify something once, and that trust can keep working across different chains and applications.
That’s why I think it matters.
Most people still look at infra plays too late. They ignore them when they’re building, then start paying attention once the market finally catches up. Sign Protocol feels like one of those cases.
It’s not being pushed as a small one-use product. The bigger angle is reusable verification that can move across ecosystems and still stay useful. That gives it a much wider lane than most people realize.
That’s what keeps me watching it.
Sometimes the best setups are the ones that stay under the radar until the market suddenly understands the scale.
SIGN feels like it’s moving in that direction.

