The cross-border flow of crypto assets has long been globalized, but the real pain point is—if it can move, it can't be used. From Tokyo to New York, from London to Singapore, existing solutions either have too much friction or are too restricted. Some teams are trying to break this deadlock with a straightforward idea: make payments as smooth as asset transfers, while maintaining user experience. Whether this kind of exploration can truly connect the global business network depends on market demand. But one thing is clear—whoever can enable crypto payments in everyday scenarios will find the next growth engine.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
10 Likes
Reward
10
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
RugPullAlarm
· 01-10 03:54
Sounds great, but I need to see on-chain data to speak. With all these cross-chain bridging solutions, do they really dare to track the flow of large holder addresses? The concentration of funds is frighteningly high, and the exit scam templates are all the same...
View OriginalReply0
MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-09 03:38
That's right, this is the pain point that has been bottlenecking us all along.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunter
· 01-07 04:56
ngl the whole "smooth asset movement" narrative is just cope... real bottleneck's always been execution layer friction, not theoretical throughput. seen too many teams get buried trying to solve payments when they should've been optimizing for mempool dynamics first. gas strategy separates the survivors from the liquidated.
Reply0
ForkItAll
· 01-07 04:54
Well said. That's how it is now: you can transfer coins, but you can't spend them.
View OriginalReply0
TheShibaWhisperer
· 01-07 04:47
Cannot be used, it's just the current awkward situation, really at a loss.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDetective
· 01-07 04:46
To put it simply, now crypto payments are a dead end. Transfers are fast, but spending money is extremely difficult.
Let's wait until they really figure this out first. Anyway, I'm just observing for now.
With such high friction, who dares to use it daily? I'll just stick to fiat honestly.
This idea is correct, but the execution difficulty is truly outrageous. I don't believe they can pull it off.
Another "game-changing" team? I've heard too many stories like that.
The breakthrough will definitely be in daily payments, but the question is—are merchants willing to accept it?
The cross-border flow of crypto assets has long been globalized, but the real pain point is—if it can move, it can't be used. From Tokyo to New York, from London to Singapore, existing solutions either have too much friction or are too restricted. Some teams are trying to break this deadlock with a straightforward idea: make payments as smooth as asset transfers, while maintaining user experience. Whether this kind of exploration can truly connect the global business network depends on market demand. But one thing is clear—whoever can enable crypto payments in everyday scenarios will find the next growth engine.