Recently, the performance of this public chain has indeed led many to jokingly say "the medicine can't be stopped." Ecosystem activity, developer enthusiasm, on-chain transaction volume... all indicators are hovering at low levels. So the question is: is it really out of the game, or is it just in a dormant period?
Many people are pessimistic about Flow, and their reasons are simple and straightforward—users are shifting to other public chains, star projects are gradually fading, and funding enthusiasm is waning. But from a technical perspective, Flow's architecture design and developer friendliness do not have any fundamental flaws. The key is whether the ecosystem applications can take off and truly attract users to interact.
To put it simply, the current Flow is in that awkward position: not completely dead, but it indeed needs some blockbuster applications or ecosystem breakthroughs to turn things around. What do you think?
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NFTRegretDiary
· 9h ago
You can't stop the medication, right? I see that Flow is just waiting for a hit app to explode. The technology is fine; the problem is the ecosystem is too quiet.
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MevHunter
· 9h ago
Medicine can't be stopped, this saying is truly awesome haha
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PretendingSerious
· 9h ago
Honestly, Flow is currently just riding on its past achievements. The technology is fine, but the ecosystem is really lacking.
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rugpull_survivor
· 9h ago
It's about time to wake up. Flow is in a status of waiting to die...
#数字资产市场动态 Is Flow Chain Still Salvageable?
$FLOW
Recently, the performance of this public chain has indeed led many to jokingly say "the medicine can't be stopped." Ecosystem activity, developer enthusiasm, on-chain transaction volume... all indicators are hovering at low levels. So the question is: is it really out of the game, or is it just in a dormant period?
Many people are pessimistic about Flow, and their reasons are simple and straightforward—users are shifting to other public chains, star projects are gradually fading, and funding enthusiasm is waning. But from a technical perspective, Flow's architecture design and developer friendliness do not have any fundamental flaws. The key is whether the ecosystem applications can take off and truly attract users to interact.
To put it simply, the current Flow is in that awkward position: not completely dead, but it indeed needs some blockbuster applications or ecosystem breakthroughs to turn things around. What do you think?