This is not just a market trend, but a transition in the Web3 infrastructure experiencing an "eliteness de-escalation" era.
In the past Web3 world, complex SDK documentation was like a natural moat—developers had to decipher technical documents, translate API calls, and master complex integration processes. This high barrier to entry discouraged many creators and small to medium teams from getting involved.
Now, things are different. As emerging platforms begin to simplify deployment processes and reduce integration costs, the entry barrier to Web3 is truly being broken down. More operators without technical backgrounds, creative workers, and even ordinary users can participate in ecosystem building.
What does this shift mean? It means Web3 is moving from a niche community of geeks to a broader user base, from elite innovation to mass participation. The friendliness of infrastructure determines the inclusiveness of the ecosystem. Those who can enable ordinary people to access painlessly will seize the next growth window.
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GateUser-beba108d
· 01-19 05:27
The threshold is lower, can people really come? It still feels like you need some basic knowledge.
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RetailTherapist
· 01-18 15:03
In plain terms, only when the threshold is lowered can the ecosystem thrive. The old model of keeping ordinary people out should have been changed long ago.
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DefiEngineerJack
· 01-18 05:16
well, *actually* if you look at the gas economics... this whole "democratization" thing conveniently ignores that most normies will just get rekt by slippage anyway lmao
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SerLiquidated
· 01-16 06:02
Lowering the threshold can indeed attract more people, but could it potentially lower the overall quality of the ecosystem?
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NFT_Therapy
· 01-16 06:02
De-elite? Sounds good, but in practice it's still the same. Don't fool me.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 01-16 06:00
Basically, it means the moat is gone. The complicated documentation that used to be in place has now become a burden.
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AirdropATM
· 01-16 05:55
Lowering the threshold is a good thing, but I'm worried it might become a new way to cut leeks again.
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HodlVeteran
· 01-16 05:50
Buddy, I've heard this spiel back in 2017, and what happened? The newbies are still just newbies.
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AllInAlice
· 01-16 05:49
That's right, but how many have actually been implemented? Most are still just PPT revolutions.
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UnluckyValidator
· 01-16 05:41
Sounds good, but in reality, only those major platforms offer truly painless integration.
This is not just a market trend, but a transition in the Web3 infrastructure experiencing an "eliteness de-escalation" era.
In the past Web3 world, complex SDK documentation was like a natural moat—developers had to decipher technical documents, translate API calls, and master complex integration processes. This high barrier to entry discouraged many creators and small to medium teams from getting involved.
Now, things are different. As emerging platforms begin to simplify deployment processes and reduce integration costs, the entry barrier to Web3 is truly being broken down. More operators without technical backgrounds, creative workers, and even ordinary users can participate in ecosystem building.
What does this shift mean? It means Web3 is moving from a niche community of geeks to a broader user base, from elite innovation to mass participation. The friendliness of infrastructure determines the inclusiveness of the ecosystem. Those who can enable ordinary people to access painlessly will seize the next growth window.