I found what this circle on Walrus truly lacks—truth.
Honestly, I’ve researched dozens of projects over the years. Reading whitepapers until my eyes hurt, from DeFi and NFTs to AI and RWA, I’ve hardly stopped. It wasn’t until I encountered Walrus that I finally truly paused.
I’m not an investor or industry big shot, just an ordinary token holder. But I want to tell you straightforwardly why I dared to buy in at $0.388 and held on without selling a single token.
**The虚 things don’t attract me; only the实 things are worth waiting for**
When I first participated in the Walrus community event, I thought it was just another old trick—sharing for a chance to win, giving away NFT avatars, and so on. But what happened? They airdropped over a hundred AirTags.
Not digital collectibles, not virtual images—real physical trackers that can be attached to luggage. At that moment, I understood: these people don’t do虚. They do things directly in reality, without concealment or disguise.
Later, I gradually understood—this is actually reflected in their protocol design. While others talk about grand ideals like “permanent storage,” Walrus simply lets you store data, verify it anytime, and access it whenever you want. They don’t discuss philosophy; they tell you what technology can do.
**Projects and products are two different things**
How many tokens listed on exchanges are still sleeping in PPT presentations? Walrus isn’t like that. The mainnet is actually running, and the protocol has been usable for a while. On the Sui ecosystem, developers are already building applications—social apps, games, data trading markets—these are no fantasy projects.
Most importantly, it has a clear business logic. If you want to use the storage function, you need to pay with $W tokens. This isn’t some虚无缥缈 application scenario; it’s a real, measurable usage demand.
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LiquidationOracle
· 10h ago
Airdrop physical AirTag this move really played some tricks, unlike those virtual avatars whose sincerity is questionable
Truly usable protocols are indeed scarce, most are still just storytelling
From 0.388 to now, not a single sale? You must have some serious conviction
Storage needs are aligned with paid tokens, creating a logical closed loop, now that's impressive
By the way, real applications have already emerged in the Sui ecosystem, which I truly look forward to
View OriginalReply0
SudoRm-RfWallet/
· 01-09 05:24
0.388 back then was really tough, still holding on tightly now haha
View OriginalReply0
AirdropFreedom
· 01-08 05:59
0.388 entry point and haven't closed a position since; this is the best endorsement for a project, isn't it?
View OriginalReply0
LiquidatedDreams
· 01-08 05:59
Those who short-sell their dreams all end up with shattered dreams. This guy is right; I respect the move of airdropping AirTag.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDoomsDay
· 01-08 05:52
Airdrop AirTag? This is what I want to see, truly eye-opening
After taking so many sugar-coated shells, a real thing suddenly feels rare
The mainnet is running smoothly, no fussing with you, I respect this spirit
View OriginalReply0
BrokenRugs
· 01-08 05:45
Really, the guys who bought at 0.388 are now laughing to death. Other projects can raise funds just with a PPT, while Walrus directly airdrops AirTag. The contrast is incredible.
I found what this circle on Walrus truly lacks—truth.
Honestly, I’ve researched dozens of projects over the years. Reading whitepapers until my eyes hurt, from DeFi and NFTs to AI and RWA, I’ve hardly stopped. It wasn’t until I encountered Walrus that I finally truly paused.
I’m not an investor or industry big shot, just an ordinary token holder. But I want to tell you straightforwardly why I dared to buy in at $0.388 and held on without selling a single token.
**The虚 things don’t attract me; only the实 things are worth waiting for**
When I first participated in the Walrus community event, I thought it was just another old trick—sharing for a chance to win, giving away NFT avatars, and so on. But what happened? They airdropped over a hundred AirTags.
Not digital collectibles, not virtual images—real physical trackers that can be attached to luggage. At that moment, I understood: these people don’t do虚. They do things directly in reality, without concealment or disguise.
Later, I gradually understood—this is actually reflected in their protocol design. While others talk about grand ideals like “permanent storage,” Walrus simply lets you store data, verify it anytime, and access it whenever you want. They don’t discuss philosophy; they tell you what technology can do.
**Projects and products are two different things**
How many tokens listed on exchanges are still sleeping in PPT presentations? Walrus isn’t like that. The mainnet is actually running, and the protocol has been usable for a while. On the Sui ecosystem, developers are already building applications—social apps, games, data trading markets—these are no fantasy projects.
Most importantly, it has a clear business logic. If you want to use the storage function, you need to pay with $W tokens. This isn’t some虚无缥缈 application scenario; it’s a real, measurable usage demand.