Unpopular Opinion
95% of Web3 is building a sci-fi highway for a world where people are still trying to learn how to ride a bicycle.
For years, the industry has been obsessed with infrastructure. Everyone is racing to launch the fastest L2, brag about theoretical TPS, or introduce another modular framework with a name that sounds like a Transformer.
But here is the reality: we have built a pristine 12 lane digital highway, yet regular people still don’t have a car.
We are hyper focused on scalability without giving people a real reason to care.
The current playbook is broken;
↦ The UX is a circus:
If users need a 20 minute YouTube tutorial on gas fees, bridging, and seed phrases just to use your app, that is not innovation it is an obstacle course. The winners will be the teams that hide the blockchain so well users barely notice it exists.
↦ Hype is not product market fit:
A strong Discord and a pumped token can keep a project alive temporarily, but communities built purely on speculation disappear the moment charts go red. Tokens should amplify a product, not replace one.
↦ Fragmentation is killing usability:
Web3 currently feels like moving to a new country just to buy groceries. Bridging assets multiple times to purchase a digital collectible is insane. We need seamless interoperability, not more isolated ecosystems.
Reality Check;
The projects that survive the next few years will be the ones doing the practical, unglamorous work:
•Smooth Web2.5 onboarding
•FaceID logins instead of seed phrase anxiety
•Real world utility
•Actual ownership and useful applications.
We need to stop building tools only developers understand and start building products normal people would actually use.
The infrastructure is ready.
Now the apps need to catch up.
Are we spending too much time laying bricks and not enough time building houses?
Life so private.. no one knows I’m actually sick. 🤧
I won’t be that super active apart from my space tomorrow.
So set reminders and support me.
https://t.co/bgcfO5CfL6