@Walrus 🦭/acc I’ll be honest, Web3 didn’t really click for me until I started looking past tokens and price action. Once you deal with real financial stuff, documents, records, things that can’t afford to disappear, you realize infrastructure is the whole game.
From what I’ve seen digging into Walrus, it’s less about DeFi buzzwords and more about answering a simple question. Where does important data live when money, assets, and ownership move on-chain? Walrus handles storage in a way that doesn’t rely on one company or one server. Your data isn’t parked in someone else’s cloud. It’s spread out, harder to censor, harder to mess with.
I think this matters a lot for real-world financial assets. Stuff like invoices, asset proofs, compliance files. Boring, yes. But these are the pieces that actually connect crypto to the real economy. Walrus runs on Sui, but you don’t need to care about the tech details to feel the value. You just know there’s less blind trust involved.
That said, I’m not pretending it’s perfect. Adoption is slow. Most users won’t care until something breaks. And if the experience isn’t smooth, people will default back to Web2 tools.
Still, watching Web3 quietly build the boring infrastructure instead of chasing hype feels like progress. It’s not loud. It’s not flashy. It just feels necessary.
