Last night I was casually testing a simple attestation on Sign Protocol just playing around, but it honestly caught me off guard.
I created a claim on Ethereum, then switched to a Solana wallet to verify it. At first, I expected some delay or extra steps… but no, it was almost instant. No bridge, no waiting everything just worked smoothly in a way that felt almost unreal.
That experience alone made me see $SIGN differently.
We hear a lot about cross-chain, but very few projects make it feel this seamless. Attestations aren’t stuck on a single chain they can move and be verified flexibly. Add ZK-proofs for privacy and hybrid storage for both transparency and security… it starts to feel less like a concept and more like something truly usable.
I’ve been following Sign since the EthSign days, so I’ve seen how they’ve been building step by step. But it wasn’t until I actually tried it myself that the direction became clear: this isn’t just a token it’s a trust layer that works across chains.
And looking further, things like digital identity or sovereign infrastructure that they talk about are starting to feel real not just narratives anymore.
I’ve held $SIGN since TGE, and the more I use it, the more reasons I find to keep holding.
Have you tried creating or verifying an attestation on Sign yet? And where do you think cross-chain verification will have the biggest impact in crypto?
@SignOfficial $SIGN #signDigitalSovereignlnfra
