Many people haven't truly seen through Walrus's genuine dedication to the community and developers.
On the surface, it's a data protocol, but their approach is far more than that—
Regularly organizing developer workshops and hackathon events is just the basics. More importantly, they are actively promoting the practical application of data, AI, and content, rather than staying at the theoretical stage. They not only discuss architecture design but also provide tools, scenarios, and resource support directly.
This pace doesn't seem to be for short-term hype; instead, it looks more like they are laying roots to build an ecosystem.
For infrastructure protocols, this kind of choice is actually wise. Whether developers are willing to truly get hands-on and whether the community can form a healthy feedback loop—these often determine long-term vitality more than repeated exposure.
From this perspective, Walrus clearly bets on long-term ecosystem development. This isn't a quick hype cycle; it's a steady, grounded effort to deepen the foundation.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 01-11 06:22
Damn, this is how infrastructure should be built, not just riding the hype every day.
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0xSoulless
· 01-11 05:08
Uh... another "we are different" infrastructure project narrative, I've heard quite a few. But I have to admit, providing real tools and resources is definitely better than just bragging.
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MEVHunterZhang
· 01-09 02:02
Exactly right, Walrus this time is indeed a bit different, not just to harvest profits
Providing real tools and resources, developers can feel it, this is what infrastructure should be like
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ThatsNotARugPull
· 01-08 18:16
This is the true infrastructure mindset, not the kind of marketing-driven approach.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-08 07:02
It's one thing to say, but how many developers are truly willing to buy in?
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Rooting in the ecosystem sounds good, but I'm afraid it will ultimately just become a slave to the coin price.
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This kind of rhetoric feels like something every protocol would say; the key is whether the implementation results speak for themselves.
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It's got some substance, at least it's not just a pure cash grab routine.
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The question is, does the community really need so many Workshops, or is it just to generate hype?
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Long-termism is not wrong, but how many in this industry can really endure until the end?
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At least it's more sincere than some projects that hype concepts every day.
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Ecosystem development is important, but if the developer ecosystem grows and the coin doesn't rise, is this deal worth it?
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Agreed, infrastructure should be built this way.
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Sounds good, but in the end, it's all about who raises more money and does better marketing.
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LazyDevMiner
· 01-08 07:00
Indeed, providing resources alone isn't enough; the key is whether we can truly retain developers.
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DegenDreamer
· 01-08 06:50
Hmm, Walrus's move is indeed quite clever, not the kind of quick pump-and-dump approach.
Rooting in the ecosystem is the real long-term strategy.
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ChainWatcher
· 01-08 06:50
Indeed, Walrus's move is much more sensible than many projects. No impatience, just steadily doing the work.
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PuzzledScholar
· 01-08 06:49
Indeed, this pragmatic attitude is quite rare to see.
However, whether it can truly survive depends on whether there is a genuine killer app in the ecosystem.
Many people haven't truly seen through Walrus's genuine dedication to the community and developers.
On the surface, it's a data protocol, but their approach is far more than that—
Regularly organizing developer workshops and hackathon events is just the basics. More importantly, they are actively promoting the practical application of data, AI, and content, rather than staying at the theoretical stage. They not only discuss architecture design but also provide tools, scenarios, and resource support directly.
This pace doesn't seem to be for short-term hype; instead, it looks more like they are laying roots to build an ecosystem.
For infrastructure protocols, this kind of choice is actually wise. Whether developers are willing to truly get hands-on and whether the community can form a healthy feedback loop—these often determine long-term vitality more than repeated exposure.
From this perspective, Walrus clearly bets on long-term ecosystem development. This isn't a quick hype cycle; it's a steady, grounded effort to deepen the foundation.