A funny thing happens when you spend enough time in crypto.

You stop asking, "Which project will be biggest?"

And start asking, "Which project becomes invisible because everyone uses it?"

Take $ETH .

Most people don't wake up thinking about settlement layers, but an enormous part of Web3 activity depends on them working reliably in the background.

Or $HYPE .

Beyond the trading buzz, it's interesting to watch how new platforms compete on user experience rather than just tokenomics. That's probably a healthier sign for the industry.

Then I found myself reading about $FLT again.

What I like about Fluence is that it's tackling a problem most users will never see directly. If an application uses decentralized storage, decentralized identity, and decentralized payments, but still relies on a traditional cloud provider to execute its workloads, is it truly decentralized?

That's the question Fluence keeps bringing me back to.

And then there's $GRASS .

The idea of turning unused internet resources into productive network infrastructure is one of those concepts that sounds obvious in hindsight. Similar to how DePIN has been changing the conversation around physical infrastructure ownership.

Maybe that's the pattern.

The most interesting projects right now aren't competing for attention.

They're competing to become part of the background.

The infrastructure nobody notices... until it's missing.

#FLT #ETH #HYPE #GRASS #Web3 #DePIN #BinanceSquare #CryptoInsights