Here's an interesting angle worth considering: when you look at where the real money and user adoption actually happen, it's usually at the application layer—not the blockchain infrastructure itself. Apps tend to capture more revenue streams and build stronger user bases than the underlying blockchain protocols they run on. This raises questions about where value truly accumulates in the Web3 stack and why building applications sometimes outpaces building base-layer tech in terms of market traction.
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MEVHunterLucky
· 2h ago
To be honest, this point is spot on... It's always the application layer that gets the meat, while L1/L2 just sip the broth.
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DefiSecurityGuard
· 3h ago
nah, this misses the critical attack surface tho. app layer concentrates honeypots way too easily... i've audited like 30+ dapps this quarter alone, red flags everywhere. infrastructure vulnerabilities cascade down. DYOR before touching any "high-revenue" app tbh.
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Liquidated_Larry
· 3h ago
NGL, this is why I've always looked down on those who only speculate on underlying public chains. Applications are the real key; where the users are, the money will be.
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TokenomicsShaman
· 3h ago
Haha, that's why I've always said that infra believers think too much; applications are the real king.
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MetaverseMortgage
· 3h ago
To be honest, the app layer does attract funds, but without infrastructure L1, it's just a castle in the air.
Here's an interesting angle worth considering: when you look at where the real money and user adoption actually happen, it's usually at the application layer—not the blockchain infrastructure itself. Apps tend to capture more revenue streams and build stronger user bases than the underlying blockchain protocols they run on. This raises questions about where value truly accumulates in the Web3 stack and why building applications sometimes outpaces building base-layer tech in terms of market traction.