I didn't expect my "How to Master Web3" to attract so many citations; in fact, your understanding of web3 is determined by you. This is easy to understand. For example:
I didn't expect my "How to Master Web3" to attract so many citations; it's actually quite easy to understand:
In Web2, 99% of people use Excel as a spreadsheet, and less than 1% use it to build models, manage risk, set prices, and then leverage it to harvest the global financial market.
In web3, 99.5% of people only use wallets, claim airdrops, and follow narratives; the ones who can write contracts, deploy protocols, and understand underlying games may be less than 0.5%.
But it is this 0.5% that designs the rules, while the rest are just working within those rules.
So in the coming year, will you continue to be "the object priced by institutions," or will you try to become "someone who can compete with institutions"? Are you willing to continue being a gambler, a pawn, or will you truly undergo a transformation?