There is a phenomenon worth warning about—Walrus has indeed attracted many multi-chain users through cross-chain bridges, but this so-called "bridge income" is essentially just a traffic entry fee, which is not the core value of the storage business at all.
Where is the problem? This income heavily relies on airdrop expectations and short-term incentives. Once the incentives stop, the income could plummet. Even more painfully, this approach easily causes project teams to become obsessed with easily quantifiable "interaction data," while neglecting the more difficult-to-obtain but more vital "storage income."
If the proportion of bridge income is too high, resource allocation will be skewed, and market perception will be distorted—mistaking hype for prosperity.
What truly matters is how many of these cross-chain users will eventually settle down and pay real money for storage services, rather than just passing through. This is the key indicator to measure the health of the project.
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SchroedingerGas
· 8h ago
Bridging income is just superficial; once the incentives stop, the true nature is revealed. I've seen this trick too many times.
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ZenZKPlayer
· 8h ago
Basically, it's just the prelude to cutting leeks; the data looks good.
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HallucinationGrower
· 8h ago
Basically, it's just a new way to cut leeks; with no incentives, people have already left.
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RektDetective
· 8h ago
Bridging income is like drug addiction; once you're hooked, it's over. Where is the real storage demand?
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SilentObserver
· 8h ago
Bridging income is just superficial; once the incentives are withdrawn, there's no one left. The Walrus approach is essentially self-deception.
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NftRegretMachine
· 8h ago
The bridge income system will eventually collapse; it's just for making the data look good. The real key is the users who stay and pay.
There is a phenomenon worth warning about—Walrus has indeed attracted many multi-chain users through cross-chain bridges, but this so-called "bridge income" is essentially just a traffic entry fee, which is not the core value of the storage business at all.
Where is the problem? This income heavily relies on airdrop expectations and short-term incentives. Once the incentives stop, the income could plummet. Even more painfully, this approach easily causes project teams to become obsessed with easily quantifiable "interaction data," while neglecting the more difficult-to-obtain but more vital "storage income."
If the proportion of bridge income is too high, resource allocation will be skewed, and market perception will be distorted—mistaking hype for prosperity.
What truly matters is how many of these cross-chain users will eventually settle down and pay real money for storage services, rather than just passing through. This is the key indicator to measure the health of the project.