To say something very harsh:

If your application is only for crypto people, then you are essentially in an internal loop. The people are still the same, the money is still the same, and no matter how many narratives you change, it's just shifting from one hand to the other.

The reality is that everyone knows the problem. Wallets are too difficult, gas fees are too annoying, and the operations are too inhumane. For ordinary people, the cost of learning to use a Web3 application far exceeds the joy it brings. The result is that the vast majority of people don't even have the patience for a first attempt.

But what's really interesting is that the problem isn't that users "don't understand", but that we keep forcing users to understand. Ordinary people have never cared what TCP/IP is; they only care about whether they can watch videos, play games, and chat. Web3 is actually the same; the blockchain shouldn't be the protagonist, the experience should.

This is also why I think Vanar Chain ($VANRY) has a very clear direction. It doesn't try to educate users on what blockchain is, but directly provides results: seamless wallets, in-app assets, and entertainment-level experiences. Users don't need to realize they are using Web3 when they are playing games, watching content, or interacting with AI characters.

The blockchain retreats to the background, while the experience stands in the foreground. This might be the true way for Web3 to break through its barriers. If you agree that Web3 ultimately needs to serve ordinary people, rather than just serving the crypto circle, then this line of thinking is worth a serious look. #vanar @Vanarchain $VANRY