What I’m watching closely is how Walrus fits into the multi chain future we’re clearly moving toward Apps are no longer living on just one chain and data shouldn’t be locked into one environment either Walrus feels like it’s being positioned as a neutral data layer that different ecosystems can tap into without friction That kind of interoperability is going to matter more and more as users move seamlessly across chains without even thinking about it.
From a builder standpoint this is huge You don’t have to redesign your data stack every time you expand to a new ecosystem You plug into Walrus once and scale outward That reduces complexity costs and development time which is exactly what teams care about when shipping real products.
For the network itself this creates optionality Adoption doesn’t depend on the success of a single chain or narrative It grows alongside the broader Web3 ecosystem That’s the kind of asymmetric positioning I like to see because it gives $WAL exposure to multiple growth paths at the same time Feels like a smart long game move rather than a short term play.


