For years, crypto has been driven by pioneers: builders, communities, traders, curious users, and folks willing to learn a still-awkward technology.
But one of the most intriguing ideas from the AMA with Robby Yung is that this phase couldn't last forever.
The entry of institutions doesn't mean crypto users lose control of the narrative. It means the market is starting to expand to a larger scale.
The trade-off is clear: more institutional adoption means more rules, more standards, and more regulatory pressure. But it also means more capital, more infrastructure, and more legitimacy.
In my opinion, this is one of the hardest pills to swallow in Web3: mass adoption doesn't resemble the early adopter culture. It's less chaotic, less experimental, and more demanding.
But it can also be more powerful.
The question no longer seems to be whether crypto will survive. The question is how it will integrate with financial products, mainstream users, and new forms of digital access.
That's where the real shift is: crypto is moving from just being an industry to becoming an infrastructure layer.
Revive los momentos más importante de este AMA aquí.@Binance Square Official @Binance LATAM Official @Binance Angels #BinanceSquareAMA #InsideTheBlockchain100