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To be honest, I once wondered whether Dusk was just riding the RWA wave and forcing its own story into this trend. After all, in the current market, which project doesn't mention RWA? It seems like everyone is falling behind if they don't. But as I started to dissect its architectural design and development path layer by layer, those concerns gradually faded away. You realize that many features are not just added later; they have been embedded in the foundation from day one.
What truly changed my perspective was how Dusk handles the seemingly contradictory relationship between privacy and auditing. Most projects, when talking about RWA, are focused on "how assets are on-chain," but few truly consider "who can see what after on-chain." The reality of finance hits exactly here—not all asset information is suitable for public disclosure, and not all transactions should be broadcast to the entire world. There should inherently be information boundaries between different participants.
When I applied this logic to Dusk's system design, I realized it is not just about temporarily adding privacy to RWA. From its inception, it has been based on the assumption that a large amount of data "cannot be exposed plainly" will flow on-chain. This assumption itself aligns perfectly with the operational logic of real assets. Imagine a public chain designed entirely around retail transfer needs suddenly tasked with carrying securities-grade assets—that logic simply doesn't hold.
There's also a detail worth pondering—Dusk didn't pursue a "comprehensive" universal design during development. Unlike some public chains that try to run everything and be compatible with everything, Dusk's choices are quite restrained in many aspects. This actually reflects a more mature approach.