Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Imagine if data is fuel, then AI is the engine accelerating. By 2026, the issue isn't a lack of fuel, but that all of it is locked inside centralized tanks. Walrus aims to redesign this system—using decentralized methods to collect, refine, and distribute these data resources.
Looking back at the market changes over the past year, the investment logic has quietly shifted. The game once played on "consensus" now turns into a pragmatic debate: "Is this really useful?"
**The Evolution of Storage**
Traditional distributed storage is essentially an upgraded warehouse—data piles up inside, and retrieving it takes time. Walrus is different. It uses a erasure coding technology called Redstuff, breaking data into tiny pieces and dispersing them across different locations.
How does this work? Imagine tearing a painting into a thousand pieces and scattering them around the world. As long as you can recover a small portion of the fragments, you can restore the entire picture—this isn't some supernatural ability, but pure mathematics. The benefits are obvious: extremely strong fault tolerance (partial node failures don't affect data integrity), and a significant boost in throughput.
Previously, distributed storage was more like "I store your data securely, but retrieval is slow." Now, it's "Your data is always accessible, as fast as memory." This is a game-changer for real-time calls to large-scale AI models.
**Why is this so critical?**
The collision of Web3 and AI has been the hottest topic in recent years. But despite the collision, practical applications have faced bottlenecks. What's missing? A truly robust infrastructure capable of supporting AI data consumption.
Currently, AI models demand increasing throughput, and the speed of data flow is skyrocketing. You can't rely on a "cold, archival hard drive" to support real-time computing needs. Innovations like Walrus turn data storage into a hot, live, quickly accessible resource.
This actually reflects a deeper shift in investment logic. Over the past two or three years, what did people invest in? Stories, concepts, communities with larger followers. Now, the questions are: "What real problems does this solve?" "Will users actually use it?" "Can the technical architecture support it?"
From this perspective, infrastructure projects like Walrus are entering a phase of genuine evaluation. It’s no longer just an airy concept but an attempt to solve a real bottleneck in the Web3+AI era.
The value of data depends on transfer efficiency. The higher the efficiency, the more potential for real-world application can be unlocked.
Wait, I feel like I've seen the Redstuff technology they're talking about somewhere before...
Another infrastructure solution for "real problems," this time it won't be another PowerPoint presentation, right?
2026 is still far away, let's see how far we can go next year before making any judgments.
It's a pretty strong hype, but can this kind of storage efficiency improvement really win over AI users?
The logic makes sense, but I don't know if it can be implemented. Previous distributed storage projects also claimed the same.
Wait, does anyone actually use this stuff? Or is it just another concept stock?
The analogy of restoring fragments is pretty good, but will it run really slow in practice?
Finally, someone is starting to ask "Can this thing really be used?" I'm really tired of the old story.
Redstuff erasure code? Never heard of it, feels like some high-end thing. Will it work in practice...
Honestly, after so long of Web3+AI collision, I haven't seen any truly effective applications. Is Walrus reliable this time?
Fast data flow is indeed fast, but who bears the cost? Decentralization will always face this hurdle.
Hmm? Redstuff erasure coding sounds good, but will the nodes really be that stable?
Decentralized tanks sound great, but I don't know when they will actually be commercially available.
I can see the logical shift, but what makes Walrus really better than Filecoin?
I just want to know when I can start using it...
Shifting from consensus games to practicality, but the problem is most people still choose to get scammed...
Fast data flow is indeed an AI pain point, but whether Walrus can solve it depends on actual performance.
Another infrastructure project, combining Web3+AI—this combo is starting to feel a bit tiresome.
Honestly, technologies capable of fast storage have existed for a long time; the key is whether they can survive...
Fragmented data storage sounds good, but I'm worried that the node operation costs will discourage everyone.
Walrus's popularity isn't because of its cutting-edge technology, but because everyone is finally tired of making up stories.
This time, it's not about hyping NFTs and the metaverse; discussing real issues feels a bit unfamiliar.
The key question is, who will maintain these scattered nodes? Is there really anyone willing?
Infrastructure is just infrastructure. Don't think about getting rich overnight; this is the right path.