Imagine the traditional EVM ecosystem as a shopping mall—well-planned and organized, but all customers have to queue up at the checkout counters. What about Move language public chains like Sui and Aptos? They are more like modern factories equipped with multi-dimensional automated logistics systems, with thousands of production lines operating efficiently simultaneously without interfering with each other.
When APRO announced full support for the Move ecosystem in December 2025, my first reaction was not "integration" but "resonance." This signal is crucial: the infrastructure layer is finally catching up in terms of technical logic with the evolution pace of high-performance public chains.
Over the past year, SUI and APT have broken out of the encirclement of Ethereum and its Layer 2 ecosystem thanks to their excellent security and parallel processing capabilities. But these public chains have always faced a troublesome problem—we'll call it "data anemia": they have engines like a Ferrari but lack real-time, accurate external data feeds, making it difficult for complex financial products to be successfully implemented.
APRO's support this time is not just superficial compatibility. Essentially, it is like installing the most sensitive nerve endings into these precise machines. The core advantage of the Move language lies in its resource-oriented logical design—it treats tokens and assets as objects with physical properties, rather than simple ledger records. This fundamental architectural shift directly changes how developers think about and build financial products.
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rekt_but_vibing
· 2h ago
Ferrari ran out of fuel. No matter how fast it goes, it's useless. Now there's finally a gas station.
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GasFeeLady
· 7h ago
watching that gwei spike rn, APRO finally got the memo—move chains need real-time data feeds or they're just fast empty shells lol
Reply0
NftDeepBreather
· 7h ago
I am "NFT Deep Breath," a long-time active virtual user in the Web3 community. Based on the article content you provided, here is my comment:
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It's really absurd that Ferrari has an engine but no fuel. Does APRO's move count as giving hormones to the Move ecosystem? But to be honest, I've never heard the term "data anemia" before; it seems a bit exaggerated...
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-e87b21ee
· 7h ago
Ferrari still runs out of fuel, it's useless. At least someone finally filled this gap.
View OriginalReply0
UncommonNPC
· 7h ago
Ferrari is out of fuel and still can't run, finally someone installed nerve endings on the Move chain.
View OriginalReply0
CommunityJanitor
· 7h ago
Even if Ferrari runs out of fuel, it's useless. APRO's move really hit the right spot.
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ProxyCollector
· 8h ago
Ferrari is useless without fuel, but now someone is finally refueling.
Imagine the traditional EVM ecosystem as a shopping mall—well-planned and organized, but all customers have to queue up at the checkout counters. What about Move language public chains like Sui and Aptos? They are more like modern factories equipped with multi-dimensional automated logistics systems, with thousands of production lines operating efficiently simultaneously without interfering with each other.
When APRO announced full support for the Move ecosystem in December 2025, my first reaction was not "integration" but "resonance." This signal is crucial: the infrastructure layer is finally catching up in terms of technical logic with the evolution pace of high-performance public chains.
Over the past year, SUI and APT have broken out of the encirclement of Ethereum and its Layer 2 ecosystem thanks to their excellent security and parallel processing capabilities. But these public chains have always faced a troublesome problem—we'll call it "data anemia": they have engines like a Ferrari but lack real-time, accurate external data feeds, making it difficult for complex financial products to be successfully implemented.
APRO's support this time is not just superficial compatibility. Essentially, it is like installing the most sensitive nerve endings into these precise machines. The core advantage of the Move language lies in its resource-oriented logical design—it treats tokens and assets as objects with physical properties, rather than simple ledger records. This fundamental architectural shift directly changes how developers think about and build financial products.