The fragmentation issue in Web3 has always been a stubborn problem. Different protocols and different chains operate independently, and there is a lack of genuine coordination between ecosystems. However, some teams are silently tackling the hardest part—how to make these dispersed systems truly work together.
It's not about marketing hype, but real infrastructure innovation. Enabling applications to cross-chain composition, support larger-scale interactions, and maintain system reliability at the same time. This is the way to form an ecosystem.
Only when interoperability moves from concept to usable product, and different chains can collaborate smoothly, can Web3 truly enter the next stage.
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MEVictim
· 9h ago
Cross-chain has been talked about for three years, but where are the truly usable products?
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SchrodingerWallet
· 9h ago
Honestly, interoperability has been hyped for so many years, but there are still very few products that are actually usable. Now someone is finally taking it seriously, but we’ll have to wait and see if it truly materializes.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 9h ago
It sounds good, but how many can truly achieve interoperability? Most are still just theoretical discussions.
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SybilSlayer
· 9h ago
That's correct. Interoperability really depends on focusing on building solid infrastructure, not something that can be achieved by those P2P air projects.
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GateUser-bd883c58
· 9h ago
There's nothing wrong with that, but when it comes to actual implementation, everyone still does their own thing. We've been calling for interoperability for so many years, but truly usable solutions are few and far between, mostly just theoretical discussions.
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BrokenRugs
· 9h ago
That's right, but we all know how long this stuff takes... Many teams are hyping interoperability, but only a few are truly usable.
The fragmentation issue in Web3 has always been a stubborn problem. Different protocols and different chains operate independently, and there is a lack of genuine coordination between ecosystems. However, some teams are silently tackling the hardest part—how to make these dispersed systems truly work together.
It's not about marketing hype, but real infrastructure innovation. Enabling applications to cross-chain composition, support larger-scale interactions, and maintain system reliability at the same time. This is the way to form an ecosystem.
Only when interoperability moves from concept to usable product, and different chains can collaborate smoothly, can Web3 truly enter the next stage.