When it comes to cross-chain, the real dividing line isn't "whether it can cross", but "how smoothly it crosses". If users still have to pick their own bridges, calculate their own fees, and worry about getting stuck halfway, then it'll always be a skill that only a few can master; only when cross-chain is productized into a seamless, automated routing process with fewer failure points will users treat it as a default operation. The more cross-chain resembles a backend service, the less users need to learn; and the less users need to learn, the more scalability can happen.

From an ecosystem perspective, the value of cross-chain shouldn't just be about "moving coins around". It's more like connecting liquidity and applications into a network: external users find it easier to join, on-chain assets are more readily accessible, and applications can better collaborate across chains. The ultimate healthy path is: the entry point brings people in, the experience keeps them around; those who stay start using it frequently, turning liquidity into a thick resource; as liquidity thickens, the implicit costs of trading and strategies decrease, further enhancing the experience. If cross-chain can serve this closed loop, it becomes not just a function, but a growth engine.

@Justin Sun_孙宇晨 #TRONEcoStar #TRON #CrossChain #Liquidity