One often overlooked fact is that ecosystem growth often isn’t about "adding another feature," but rather reducing the failure rate of existing functionalities. Users are less worried about slightly higher fees and more concerned about attempting to execute a transaction only to encounter repeated errors in authorization, routing, and confirmation. After one error, you'll start to doubt; after two, you’ll bail. A mature ecosystem operates like a well-oiled machine: fewer steps, more predictable outcomes, and errors that are easy to pinpoint.

When the cost of failure is minimized, user behavior tends to become more "engineered": people start validating paths with small, multiple transactions, managing positions in batches, and rebalancing according to rules rather than relying on emotional gut feelings. The real value lies not in making a correct judgment once, but in transforming that judgment into a repeatable execution process. Once an ecosystem empowers the average person to take action, review their trades, and iterate continuously, growth will shift from being "driven by marketing" to being "pulled by everyday demand."

@Justin Sun_孙宇晨 #TRONEcoStar #TRON #OnChain #UserExperience