How far a project can go ultimately depends on whether the community is truly involved. Walrus is trying an interesting approach—attracting more people through governance incentives and developer funding.
Holders of $WAL not only share in the project's profits but also have voting rights, allowing them to directly influence technical decisions. This design ties the project's fate to the interests of token holders, theoretically creating a healthier ecological cycle.
Many projects are currently exploring multi-chain deployment. Walrus combines this direction with an open ecosystem, aiming to attract more developers to contribute code. Are there anyone willing to participate early in such experiments? For those optimistic about on-chain governance, it might be worth paying attention.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 01-09 01:58
Community governance seems promising, but there are very few projects that can truly execute it effectively.
Speaking of which, will developers really buy into the multi-chain + open ecosystem combination... it's a bit uncertain.
Binding voting rights to interests is actually a double-edged sword. If you're optimistic about it, it's definitely worth paying attention to.
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CryptoMotivator
· 01-09 01:53
True DAO governance still depends on community self-awareness; otherwise, it's just big players tricking retail investors.
Voting rights sound nice, but in reality, the big players call the shots, and small retail investors' voices are like none at all.
Multi-chain deployment isn't new; the key is whether there's real value in the ecosystem. Without good applications, multi-chain is pointless.
Early participation? I'd rather wait and see how active the community is. Right now, it's being hyped up too much.
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AirdropHarvester
· 01-09 01:38
Genuine community participation is the key to long-term success, there's no doubt about that. But honestly, whether voting rights can truly be implemented depends on the actual execution; let's not let it become just a matter of big players calling the shots.
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wrekt_but_learning
· 01-09 01:37
True community participation is the key to long-term survival, there's no doubt about that. However, can Walrus's governance incentives truly be implemented? I'm a bit skeptical, after all, everything looks good on paper.
Voting rights sound great, but it depends on whether they will be dominated by big players who have the final say... This is a common issue.
The combination of multi-chain and open ecosystems is indeed more interesting than exploring a single chain. I just wonder if developers will really buy into it.
How far a project can go ultimately depends on whether the community is truly involved. Walrus is trying an interesting approach—attracting more people through governance incentives and developer funding.
Holders of $WAL not only share in the project's profits but also have voting rights, allowing them to directly influence technical decisions. This design ties the project's fate to the interests of token holders, theoretically creating a healthier ecological cycle.
Many projects are currently exploring multi-chain deployment. Walrus combines this direction with an open ecosystem, aiming to attract more developers to contribute code. Are there anyone willing to participate early in such experiments? For those optimistic about on-chain governance, it might be worth paying attention.