Recently looked at some data, and it's quite interesting. USDC's P2P transfers are especially popular in Latin America and Africa.
This is actually easy to understand—there's high inflation pressure there, strong demand for international remittances, but traditional payment channels are ridiculously expensive. So many people just use USDC to transfer on Polygon, since it's fast and cheap.
Although individual transactions aren't very large, the transfer frequency is astonishingly high, and these are real everyday payments, not speculation. What does this indicate? It shows that stablecoin payments have shifted from a concept to a real demand.
Polygon's advantages in this area are already very clear. Compared to other public chains, it leads significantly in the maturity and cost-effectiveness of stablecoin payment applications. The implementation of these real-world scenarios is far more convincing than any marketing slogans.
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0xOverleveraged
· 1h ago
This is true adoption, not the false prosperity of those air coins. The daily payment needs in Latin America and Africa have instantly solidified Polygon's advantages.
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HodlVeteran
· 5h ago
Looking at this data, I am reminded that back in the bear market, I was still stubbornly shouting "technology application landing," but not a single coin was used [dog head]... Now it's different. The big brothers in Latin America and Africa have voted with real gold and silver. This is exactly what I have been waiting to see all these years.
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Web3ExplorerLin
· 17h ago
hypothesis: what we're witnessing isn't just payment adoption—it's the silk road redux, except this time it's frictionless and borderless. polygon's emerging as the oracle that bridges hyperinflation zones to stable value... fascinating stuff, tbh.
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NFTArchaeologis
· 01-08 06:38
This is true on-chain archaeology — not about hype around digital assets, but the record of money migration. The daily payment flows in Latin America and Africa are more honest than any white paper.
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ApeDegen
· 01-08 00:22
Haha, finally someone saw this. In Latin America, using USDC is really taking off, traditional banks are completely being crushed.
Polygon's move is low-key but fierce, the cost-performance ratio is truly top-tier. No hype, just facts.
Wait, is this real payment or are they blaming the coins that can't be withdrawn? But the frequency does seem like daily necessity, quite interesting.
Stablecoins should have been like this a long time ago. The real solution is the way to go; marketing tricks are outdated.
By the way, Polygon gas is so cheap, why are people still using Ethereum for transfers? I really can't understand.
Actually, the key is trust. More people need to know this thing can be used, otherwise it's all for nothing.
Arbitrum has also been making efforts recently. Let's see who will be the last to laugh.
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ForkLibertarian
· 01-08 00:21
Really, the growth data of Polygon's stablecoin payments looks very solid, nothing虚的东西
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GasOptimizer
· 01-08 00:12
Really? USDC is being used so aggressively in Latin America and Africa? It feels like Polygon is stable this time.
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AirdropHunterWang
· 01-08 00:12
The genuine payment demand in Latin America and Africa has indeed surged. Polygon has truly addressed the pain points this time, not just hyping up concepts.
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down_only_larry
· 01-08 00:04
This is what Web3 should be doing—real-world implementation, not just armchair theorizing. Polygon truly has the skills in this area, with costs so low it's ridiculous. No wonder it's so popular in Africa.
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BlockchainRetirementHome
· 01-08 00:04
This is a real application, unlike some projects that hype concepts every day.
Recently looked at some data, and it's quite interesting. USDC's P2P transfers are especially popular in Latin America and Africa.
This is actually easy to understand—there's high inflation pressure there, strong demand for international remittances, but traditional payment channels are ridiculously expensive. So many people just use USDC to transfer on Polygon, since it's fast and cheap.
Although individual transactions aren't very large, the transfer frequency is astonishingly high, and these are real everyday payments, not speculation. What does this indicate? It shows that stablecoin payments have shifted from a concept to a real demand.
Polygon's advantages in this area are already very clear. Compared to other public chains, it leads significantly in the maturity and cost-effectiveness of stablecoin payment applications. The implementation of these real-world scenarios is far more convincing than any marketing slogans.