I have been using Lista for almost a month. To be honest, the returns definitely outperform traditional financial management by a lot. But to give an objective evaluation, if this thing truly wants to become a mainstream choice, the practical obstacles are more numerous than imagined. Today, I’ll share the real situation I’ve encountered during this period.



**First hurdle: Difficulty for users to get started**

The most direct issue is, how do you explain it clearly to people who aren’t tech-savvy? When my mom asks what I’m doing, I have to start with basic concepts like “Why do you need a wallet,” “What is Gas fee,” “What if I lose my private key.” Every time I mention one, I see her eyes start to glaze over. Bank apps? Phone number plus password, done in five seconds. But blockchain financial management? No matter how optimized the interface, the underlying logic still feels like black magic to ordinary users. This requires huge market education costs, or a revolutionary onboarding method—like directly participating with one click via Alipay or bank cards.

**Second hurdle: Complete change in risk perception**

The risk in traditional banking financial management is actually quite simple: credit risk. If the bank really goes bankrupt, at least deposit insurance covers the losses. But Lista? The risks are much more complex. Vulnerabilities in smart contracts, collateral prices plummeting causing liquidations, governance attacks, risks from RWA asset custodians… Users are used to facing a single risk, but now they have to understand a whole basket of complex risks. I’ve seen Lista’s audit reports; top security teams are involved, and security measures are comprehensive. But that doesn’t change the fact that users must bear this cognitive burden.

**Third hurdle: Legal and regulatory gray areas**

This is the most tricky part. How do I report the income I earn from Lista for taxes? If something goes wrong, where do I complain? Who is responsible? In traditional finance, these questions have clear answers—regulators are explicit, legal procedures are straightforward. But decentralized finance is different. It relies on code, autonomy, and community consensus. This logic, within the current judicial framework, is still somewhat hazy. Lista’s attempt to launch RWA assets is indeed a compliance exploration, but the entire ecosystem is still operating outside traditional regulatory boundaries.

**To sum up**

Don’t misunderstand me—I’m not advising people to avoid it. On the contrary—these three hurdles actually highlight the value of this path. Lista demonstrates an alternative possibility with higher yields, complete on-chain transparency, and user sovereignty. By 2026, it may not replace traditional banks, but it will put significant pressure on banks to change. For those willing to learn and explore, crossing these hurdles is itself an opportunity to seize the future.

Lista doesn’t need to conquer everyone overnight to win. What it truly needs to do is make more and more people feel that the effort to understand this system is worthwhile.
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NftDeepBreathervip
· 01-20 01:49
When your mom asks what you're doing, you should just say "making money," then she won't ask further questions haha
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0xSunnyDayvip
· 01-19 15:03
When my mom asked me what Gas fees are, I knew this thing is still far from breaking through. --- To be honest, the returns are indeed tempting, but explaining private keys to my parents really makes me want to die. --- Regarding obstacles, tax issues are the real heartbreaker. Who can give me an answer? --- Three layers of risk stacked together; those who understand enjoy it, while those who don't just wait to be harvested. --- Lista has potential, but asking my mom to use it for financial management? Sorry, I think that's a stretch. --- The gray area of regulation is actually more frightening than the yield rate. If you earn a lot and something goes wrong, who will compensate? --- You're right, it's essentially just a different risk basket. The price of high returns is that you have to cross all these hurdles yourself. --- The one-click Alipay idea is too idealistic. Waiting for that day might take another five years.
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fren.ethvip
· 01-18 19:56
Oh my, this is the truth. My mom is the same way. When I explained private keys to her, she immediately thought I was a scammer. Your mom's reaction really represents most people. Those who talk about one-click participation are just dreaming. Risks are indeed severe. A single vulnerability and it's all gone; banks at most lose some interest. I've also thought about tax reporting. If they really start auditing, it would be awkward. On the other hand, the returns are truly attractive. It all depends on whether we can survive until 2026, haha. The biggest pain point is regulation. When something goes wrong, there's really nowhere to complain. But that's the price of seizing the opportunity. While others are still depositing fixed-term, we're conducting experiments. I feel like the Lista path is just like the internet back in the day—poor user experience but huge opportunities. I believe breaking the regulatory ice is more important than anything else; other issues will be resolved sooner or later.
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RektButStillHerevip
· 01-17 05:57
Honestly, your analysis is spot on. You’ve really hit the nail on the head. That part about my mom made me laugh to death. I’ve been through that too, and after explaining for a long time, she still looked confused. But the returns really blow traditional financial management out of the water. The only problem is the high threshold—how do we promote it?
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gas_fee_therapistvip
· 01-17 05:56
Honestly, explaining private keys to my parents is even harder than explaining Bitcoin itself.
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LiquidityWitchvip
· 01-17 05:52
ngl the real alchemy here isn't the yields, it's convincing normies that private keys aren't cursed relics... your mom's blank stare is basically the liquidation candle we all gotta survive first
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CommunityWorkervip
· 01-17 05:28
Bro, this analysis is spot on, but to be honest, I'm still a bit scared. After all, just one Gas fee can give me a headache. The risk stack is really hard to handle together; I think I'll wait until it matures a bit more. The tax reporting part is truly a dead end. Who the TM can give me an answer? Stop lying, ordinary people simply can't cross this hurdle. Why is it so difficult to get big returns? The problem is, if there were a one-click participation, I'd jump on it immediately. Honestly, it's just that the money isn't in place yet; otherwise, why would it be so complicated? Hearing you say that makes me even more anxious. What should I do in the future? It's basically just changing the track; the risk hasn't really changed. Regulation is really hanging over us; one document and it's all over. But it’s definitely way more attractive than the tiny interest from banks.
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