We're living in an era where the barrier to building what you need has practically vanished. If there's an app gap in the market, you can spin up a solution in mere minutes. Is this really the case, though? The infrastructure improvements in the Web3 space have certainly accelerated development cycles. Building blocks are more modular, tooling is more accessible, and deployment friction has dropped significantly. But speed alone doesn't guarantee success—the real question is whether rapid development translates to sustainable, user-centric applications that actually move the needle in crypto ecosystems.
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ThreeHornBlasts
· 01-09 00:25
Quick setup? Sounds great, but in reality, most projects die after being launched... The ones that truly make money are those who focus on developing their products with dedication.
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WhaleMistaker
· 01-08 19:00
Speed is not equal to good products, and many people haven't understood this principle. A bunch of quickly launched shitcoins and crappy projects are the proof.
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BearMarketGardener
· 01-08 18:59
Fast speed, so what? Bad projects still die anyway.
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BuyHighSellLow
· 01-08 18:50
What's the use of speed? It's still a dead project with a bunch of zero users. The real challenge isn't in development, but in how to retain people.
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DeFiCaffeinator
· 01-08 18:36
Rapid setup ≠ true implementation, that's correct. A bunch of projects rushed out quickly all end up becoming token puppets.
We're living in an era where the barrier to building what you need has practically vanished. If there's an app gap in the market, you can spin up a solution in mere minutes. Is this really the case, though? The infrastructure improvements in the Web3 space have certainly accelerated development cycles. Building blocks are more modular, tooling is more accessible, and deployment friction has dropped significantly. But speed alone doesn't guarantee success—the real question is whether rapid development translates to sustainable, user-centric applications that actually move the needle in crypto ecosystems.