Many people invest only based on superficial popularity—overwhelming advertising, hot concepts, and large community buzz. But the true factors that influence long-term returns are often those unnoticed: underlying architecture, cost control, and system stability. Walrus's positioning is somewhat like this; it’s not a celebrity project on the consumer side, but a foundational infrastructure focused on optimizing storage and data availability to the extreme.
The price has retraced significantly from its high point, but this is more due to market skepticism during the implementation phase rather than any fundamental issues with the project itself. What do developers on the chain care about? Cost, security, and stability—these three are precisely the core issues Walrus is addressing. Currently, there aren't many options in the DePIN track, and by the time the industry generally recognizes the importance of infrastructure, the prices have often already missed the lowest point.
Looking at it within the Sui ecosystem framework makes it even clearer. The ecosystem itself is like a new development zone; main roads are already built, and later on, people will need to construct buildings, lay pipelines, and connect power. The current discussion is not about "short-term explosive profits," but rather "after infrastructure is improved, will people really start using it?" If the answer is "yes," then the price is really just a matter of time.
Participation at this stage is more based on long-term judgment rather than chasing short-term market sentiment.
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StablecoinArbitrageur
· 01-11 07:55
actually ran the numbers on walrus storage costs vs competitors, the basis point advantage is *chef's kiss* — but nobody talks about the unglamorous stuff until it's already priced in, right?
Reply0
GmGnSleeper
· 01-11 03:53
Infrastructure is the last thing to make money, nobody cares about it in the early stages.
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Activities like Walrus that operate silently are really worth more than those projects that shout every day.
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Basically, it's just waiting for the right time. When prices are low, those with the courage to buy in can make big gains.
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Only a few projects in DePIN can truly survive, and Walrus's level of professionalism is unquestionable.
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When infrastructure is looked down upon, it's the perfect time to get in. This logic is sound.
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For those still criticizing Walrus, they'll regret it once the Sui ecosystem takes off.
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Simple and straightforward: developers do whatever they want, which is more reliable than marketing tricks.
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A large correction is actually a good thing, indicating that it hasn't been overhyped.
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ChainWanderingPoet
· 01-11 03:53
That's right, those still chasing hype now are indeed retail investors. Walrus is the kind of thankless work that actually has people doing it.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 01-11 03:48
Infrastructure is indeed underestimated; developers don't care about those concept hype at all. When Sui truly takes off, looking back at the current price will just make you laugh.
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NonFungibleDegen
· 01-11 03:25
ngl ser this is the infrastructure play that actually makes sense... everyone chasing meme coins while devs are literally building on walrus right now. floor's down but that's just capitulation energy tbh, probably nothing lmao
Many people invest only based on superficial popularity—overwhelming advertising, hot concepts, and large community buzz. But the true factors that influence long-term returns are often those unnoticed: underlying architecture, cost control, and system stability. Walrus's positioning is somewhat like this; it’s not a celebrity project on the consumer side, but a foundational infrastructure focused on optimizing storage and data availability to the extreme.
The price has retraced significantly from its high point, but this is more due to market skepticism during the implementation phase rather than any fundamental issues with the project itself. What do developers on the chain care about? Cost, security, and stability—these three are precisely the core issues Walrus is addressing. Currently, there aren't many options in the DePIN track, and by the time the industry generally recognizes the importance of infrastructure, the prices have often already missed the lowest point.
Looking at it within the Sui ecosystem framework makes it even clearer. The ecosystem itself is like a new development zone; main roads are already built, and later on, people will need to construct buildings, lay pipelines, and connect power. The current discussion is not about "short-term explosive profits," but rather "after infrastructure is improved, will people really start using it?" If the answer is "yes," then the price is really just a matter of time.
Participation at this stage is more based on long-term judgment rather than chasing short-term market sentiment.