Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain
Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain
Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain
Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain
Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain
Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain
Most people in crypto don’t actually want decentralization.
They want convenience, fast gains, and someone else to blame when things go wrong.
We romanticize “community” and “permissionless systems,” but the moment users are forced to manage seed phrases, understand bridges, or take full responsibility for their assets, they immediately ask for customer support and centralized recovery.
And honestly? That’s normal.
Mass adoption won’t come from making everyone a crypto expert.
It’ll come from making crypto so invisible that users don’t even realize they’re using it.
The projects that win won’t necessarily be the most ideological.
They’ll be the ones that quietly remove friction.
Ten years from now, I think most people will interact with blockchain the same way they interact with TCP/IP today: every day, without caring what it is.
And I suspect that prediction makes both crypto purists and crypto skeptics uncomfortable.
@RallyOnChain