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Imagine you are piloting a supersonic fighter jet assembled from 10,000 parts, each with its own "thoughts." Without a precise flight control system to coordinate them, it would disintegrate in mid-air at the moment of takeoff due to uneven forces. This perfectly illustrates the dilemma faced by a top-tier high-performance public chain at the end of 2025—pursuing extreme performance and complete decentralization, yet standing on the brink of "precise disintegration." The more extreme the decentralization, the more it requires a robust algorithmic governance system to serve as a coordinator.
There was once a naive dream in the crypto space: "Code is Law," meaning no human intervention was needed. But when sub-second settlement speeds encounter thousands of active nodes running simultaneously, problems become apparent. Decentralization is not just about the dissolution of authority; it also accelerates entropy. Early Bitcoin resembled a giant clockwork driven by gravity, while this new generation of public chains is more like a quantum-era accelerator—any tiny drift in consensus could trigger a chain reaction of economic collapse.
From a technical perspective, these public chains introduce "atomic parallel execution," a cutting-edge technology that can demonstrate the efficiency of a thousand-armed Avalokitesvara when handling massive transactions. The problem is: the higher the degree of node decentralization, the more susceptible the network is to falling into a "mediocre quagmire" during technical upgrades or parameter adjustments (such as dynamic Gas fee reforms). Nodes with different interests will pull in different directions, like tugging on a piece of silk, ultimately tearing the entire network apart. In this era of multi-chain chaos, this governance fragility is becoming a fatal flaw.