Recently, while researching the development of @SignOfficial , I began to rethink a question: in the context of ongoing global geopolitical changes, is the true value of blockchain projects shifting from 'financial tools' to 'infrastructure'?
Taking the Middle East situation as an example, there have long been issues such as restricted capital flows, an unstable monetary system, and extremely high cross-border trust costs. In such an environment, traditional finance struggles to operate efficiently, while decentralized technology has inherent advantages. This is also why I believe the narrative of #Sign Geopolitical Infrastructure is not just a concept, but a gradual manifestation of real demands.
$SIGN 's potential value does not merely stem from market speculation, but rather depends on whether it can support the core functions of "cross-regional trust" and "data/asset circulation." If @SignOfficial can establish practical application scenarios in high-friction markets like the Middle East, such as on-chain identity verification, cross-border asset recording, or trusted data transmission, then its value will have very strong long-term support.
From an investment logic perspective, such projects differ from traditional memes or short-term narratives; they lean more towards "infrastructure-type assets." This means that the early market may underestimate their value, but once network effects are formed, the growth curve will exhibit nonlinear amplification.
I personally pay special attention to several points: First, whether @SignOfficial can land actual cooperation and application; second, whether $SIGN 's use cases in the entire ecosystem continue to expand; third, whether the market starts to view these types of assets as "alternative infrastructure" as geopolitical tensions escalate.
When most people are still chasing short-term fluctuations, I tend to observe this kind of "slow but potentially very large" opportunity. Perhaps the true value of $SIGN lies not in the next wave of increases, but in whether it can become an indispensable underlying tool in certain regions in the future.
