@Walrus 🦭/acc I keep circling back to Walrus for a pretty simple reason: it focuses on the part of Web3 everyone uses, but barely talks about… data.
Tokens move value, sure. But real applications run on files. Images, video, game assets, AI data, records. And most of that still lives on centralized servers with a big “trust us” sticker on top. Walrus is quietly removing that dependency.
What stands out to me is the resilience mindset. Data isn’t just stored, it’s split, distributed, and designed to be recoverable even when parts of the network go down. No single point of failure. No silent breakage. Just infrastructure that keeps working.
$WAL fits naturally into this. You pay to store. Operators earn for staying reliable. Governance shapes how the system evolves. Simple, aligned incentives.
If Web3 is ever going to feel normal to everyday users, it won’t be because of flashy features. It’ll be because the boring stuff works.
Walrus is building the boring stuff.
