Last weekend, I had dinner with a few tech-savvy buddies and we discussed the current dilemmas of Web3. Everyone independently mentioned the same issue: concepts are everywhere, but there are very few environments that truly enable business models to take off. In the past, we all believed in the speed of public blockchains, thinking that high TPS was the key to success. But what happened? No developers are willing to build on them, and no users want to stay and play. No matter how good the performance is, it's just an idle engine. So lately, I've been researching the Soneium chain, mainly to see if Sony's team can genuinely develop the ecosystem.
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SleepyValidator
· 12-10 21:26
No matter how fast performance gets, without an ecosystem, it's just a display. What kind of innovations can Sony bring to the table with their entry?
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SerumSquirrel
· 12-10 10:53
Really, who is still bragging about TPS now... What's the use of good performance if no one uses it, it's all pointless. Soneium having Sony's backing definitely makes a difference; now it depends on whether they can really come up with something meaningful.
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BearMarketBuilder
· 12-10 10:46
Honestly, what's the use of high TPS if there's no ecosystem? It's just a display.
Sony's Soneium still has some potential; ultimately, it's about whether it can retain users.
No matter how impressive the concept is, you need real projects with actual funding.
The ecosystem is indeed the bottleneck; it feels like the entire Web3 space is in a competition for supremacy.
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GateUser-2fce706c
· 12-10 10:44
It's been said before, that high TPS isn't that important; the key is the ecosystem. If Sony can really succeed with this move, that would be the commanding height.
Last weekend, I had dinner with a few tech-savvy buddies and we discussed the current dilemmas of Web3. Everyone independently mentioned the same issue: concepts are everywhere, but there are very few environments that truly enable business models to take off. In the past, we all believed in the speed of public blockchains, thinking that high TPS was the key to success. But what happened? No developers are willing to build on them, and no users want to stay and play. No matter how good the performance is, it's just an idle engine. So lately, I've been researching the Soneium chain, mainly to see if Sony's team can genuinely develop the ecosystem.