It may have already been earned, but it's not necessarily immediately felt as "your own money."
Many troubles don't necessarily come from how the money is transferred, but rather from the same amount of money entering different systems, where its identity keeps changing. On-chain, it's a stablecoin. In the banking system, it needs to become fiat currency. In investment scenarios, it becomes another type of tradeable funds. It still looks like the same asset, but every time you switch scenarios, it feels like it needs to readapt to a new set of rules. This is actually a layer of fragmentation that many people easily overlook. It's not that it can't be transferred. It's not that there's no path at all. But once your money leaves the chain, it's no longer just a simple "balance." It becomes an inflow asset in the platform's eyes, cross-border funds in the bank's eyes, investable balance in the broker's eyes. Money is still money, but every time it enters a different system, it has to be redefined. That's where the problem lies. Previously, most people stayed within a single system—either primarily on-chain or primarily in traditional accounts, with relatively fixed usage scenarios for their funds. But it's different now. More and more people's asset states are inherently mixed: using stablecoins for settlement on a daily basis, also looking at HK and US stocks, also having fiat currency needs, and occasionally encountering cross-border transfers and real-world consumption scenarios. What's most annoying then is often not that any single step is particularly difficult, but that every time you switch scenarios, it feels like you have to go through the entire process all over again. At its core, what many users lack today is not a single standalone product, but rather a more continuous fund experience. And precisely because of this, when looking at tools like @BIYAPAYOFFICIAL recently, the focus is no longer just "what can it do," but whether it's trying to reduce the fragmentation caused by these repeated switches. This might sound trivial, not even fitting to be told as a particularly exciting story. But it's very real. Because financial experience often isn't bad because of some major issue, but because of these continuously repeating small disconnection points. You're clearly holding the same amount of value, yet you constantly have to prove it anew, convert it anew, and re-enter the next step in different systems using different methods. This repetition itself is a cost. So increasingly, I feel what's needed is software that doesn't necessarily just make funds flow faster, but rather keeps funds maintaining a kind of continuity when switching between different systems. When a sum of money doesn't have to "change its identity" in every scenario, only then is it more truly like a freely available asset. @BIYAPAYOFFICIAL may not be suitable for everyone, but for those who need to frequently switch between on-chain and traditional finance, it's definitely worth adding to the list of regularly used tools.
It may have already been earned, but it's not necessarily immediately felt as "your own money."
Many troubles don't necessarily come from how the money is transferred,
but rather from the same amount of money entering different systems, where its identity keeps changing.
On-chain, it's a stablecoin.
In the banking system, it needs to become fiat currency.
In investment scenarios, it becomes another type of tradeable funds.
It still looks like the same asset,
but every time you switch scenarios, it feels like it needs to readapt to a new set of rules.
This is actually a layer of fragmentation that many people easily overlook.
It's not that it can't be transferred.
It's not that there's no path at all.
But once your money leaves the chain, it's no longer just a simple "balance."
It becomes an inflow asset in the platform's eyes,
cross-border funds in the bank's eyes,
investable balance in the broker's eyes.
Money is still money,
but every time it enters a different system, it has to be redefined.
That's where the problem lies.
Previously, most people stayed within a single system—either primarily on-chain or primarily in traditional accounts, with relatively fixed usage scenarios for their funds.
But it's different now.
More and more people's asset states are inherently mixed: using stablecoins for settlement on a daily basis, also looking at HK and US stocks, also having fiat currency needs, and occasionally encountering cross-border transfers and real-world consumption scenarios.
What's most annoying then is often not that any single step is particularly difficult,
but that every time you switch scenarios, it feels like you have to go through the entire process all over again.
At its core, what many users lack today is not a single standalone product,
but rather a more continuous fund experience.
And precisely because of this, when looking at tools like @BIYAPAYOFFICIAL recently, the focus is no longer just "what can it do," but whether it's trying to reduce the fragmentation caused by these repeated switches.
This might sound trivial, not even fitting to be told as a particularly exciting story.
But it's very real.
Because financial experience often isn't bad because of some major issue,
but because of these continuously repeating small disconnection points.
You're clearly holding the same amount of value, yet you constantly have to prove it anew, convert it anew, and re-enter the next step in different systems using different methods.
This repetition itself is a cost.
So increasingly, I feel what's needed is software that doesn't necessarily just make funds flow faster,
but rather keeps funds maintaining a kind of continuity when switching between different systems.
When a sum of money doesn't have to "change its identity" in every scenario,
only then is it more truly like a freely available asset.
@BIYAPAYOFFICIAL may not be suitable for everyone, but for those who need to frequently switch between on-chain and traditional finance, it's definitely worth adding to the list of regularly used tools.