This comic is not just a story; it's a visual demonstration of the core defense mechanism of the Walrus protocol:
The shadow in the image: Represents malicious attacks or node failures on the chain.
Pink split entities: Represent the data being sliced and distributed using Erasure Coding (erasure coding) technology.
Reconstruction: Represents that even if some nodes are damaged, data can still be perfectly restored through algorithms.

【Part 1: When a Single Point of Failure Occurs】
I just really wanted to quietly play a round of (Street Fighter 6). Seriously.
The controller was in my hand, the screen was pixelated, and I was serious. Then the next second, the nearby computer turned red, alarms blaring, a shadow-faced figure staring at me from the screen. Holy crap, my wallet's$WAL !!!
You know that feeling? Not 'Oh no, it's over,' but 'I'm already gone.'
This is the fragility of centralized storage — once hacked, you won't even have time to react.
My mind went completely blank, and I started running around the room, shouting 'What should I do?' but I couldn't even hear myself.
And Wally?@Walrus 🦭/acc He was there. Always there.
Sitting there, holding the controller, calmly knocking me out of this round first.
I completely broke down emotionally, lunging at him and biting his head (physical awakening). He just slowly turned his head, glanced at the computer, and a little 'bling' flashed near his eye — so annoying.
He seemed to say: 'Is that it? DDoS attack? Tickling.'

【Part 2: The Brutal Aesthetics of Erasure Coding】
Then things started making no sense.
The hacker swung a pixelated greatsword down. Wally instantly transformed into a green, spiky-haired form (Blanka Mode), looking like 'Go ahead, cut me.' The shadow slashed, but was immediately electrocuted and smoking.
But I didn't expect the hacker to get back up and summon a massive energy wave (malicious data flood).
High-octane moment coming:
After the explosion, Wally was gone — more precisely, turned into a pile of soft, pink, squishy little things.
Like slime, or something that shouldn't be on my floor.
Attention! This isn't just a transformation — it's a perfect demonstration of Walrus Protocol's core technology: Erasure Coding!
Faced with attacks or data pressure, Wally doesn't fight back head-on. Instead, he shards himself (data) into countless Blobs.
You can't kill something that's already 'broken'.

【Part 3: Data Reassembly and... A Hacker With Chocolate Flavor】
The pink little things moved, stacked up, and stood upright.
They instantly reassembled into a pink, fist-clenching monster.
Data Availability (Data Availability) restored to 100%.
Then I saw it discharge electricity, and the shadow was instantly turned into a humanoid chocolate bar, lifted up and eaten like a snack.
Threats? Nonexistent. To Walrus, malicious attacks are just an extra meal.
The crisis is over. I rushed over, hugging Wally and rubbing against him, thinking, 'Of course, you're the one I can rely on.'
The next second, there was another zap on him.
I'm lying on the ground, dark, smoking.@LD老毒先生_万币侯 @S_k楠
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📝 Azure Survival Summary:
If you ask me what I learned?
Don't mess with hackers.
Even less so with Walrus. Its fault tolerance is absurd — even if shattered into pieces, it can reassemble itself.
Don't just hug a Blob in a room with Blobs. ⚡️
#Walrus #Sui #Web3 #DePIN #ErasureCoding
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Next episode teaser:
Survival comes at a cost.
Especially when Azure sends you the bill for storing that image on Ethereum last month... 📉
"Help! Wally! I'm bankrupt!!"
Next episode: (Bills and Lollipops), where you'll witness Walrus's 'GAS at白菜 price' magic. 🍭