I dreamt yesterday that I was dragged into a desert casino by a talking camel, which insisted that I bet on "What will the next oil turn into?" I casually said, "It will turn into a sovereign token on the blockchain," and the camel immediately kicked me awake... The first thing I did upon waking was to check the Middle East news, and it felt like this dream was surprisingly accurate. In reality, the chess game in the Middle East is becoming increasingly intense: Saudi Arabia's Neom continues to pile mirror skyscrapers and zero-carbon cities in the desert, the UAE has turned Dubai into a global crypto haven, Iran and Israel are at each other's throats, the geopolitical tension is heavy, and the Red Sea shipping routes are twisted with fluctuating oil prices. Yet, the anxiety of these countries regarding the "post-oil era" has ironically become the biggest fuel. They are not betting on oil prices rebounding, but on who will first seize digital sovereignty — data that cannot be touched by outsiders, while also maneuvering global liquidity, DeFi, and cross-border payments. Whoever wins can stand more firmly in the next round of chaos. @SignOfficial #sign地缘政治基建 $SIGN

This project and its $SIGN token are right at this most tantalizing point. Not the kind that just shouts slogans, but a truly actionable sovereign-level digital infrastructure: omni-chain attestation allows on-chain identities to be both private and auditable, TokenTable enables precise asset allocation, and zero-knowledge proofs protect data from leakage. In simple terms, it helps the government build a blockchain system that says "I am the boss, but can connect globally." Just imagining the practical scenarios is exciting: in the high-growth countries of the Middle East, $SIGN could support CBDC pilot projects — digital fiat currencies that are safe and controllable, and can be settled across borders instantly; cross-border trade settlements on-chain, eliminating layers of intermediaries and corruption risks; public services, precise subsidies, and financial inclusion all on-chain, maximizing efficiency while preventing cheating. The demand for these things in the Middle East is extraordinary because traditional finance is wobbling in the chaos, and they urgently need a new path that is "controllable + efficient." The project's foundation is solid: Abu Dhabi already has real government cooperation cases, top VCs like Sequoia Capital and Binance Labs have all-in early, with a total supply of 10 billion, community incentives and buyback burn mechanisms are still quite reliable. With Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 and the UAE's blockchain strategy accelerating, the wave of the digital economy in the Middle East is rising.