Walrus (WAL) makes the most sense when you stop treating it like a typical DeFi token and start treating it like infrastructure. The protocol is built to support secure and private blockchain-based interactions, which is already a strong use case because privacy is still one of the biggest missing pieces in many on-chain systems. But what adds depth is that Walrus doesn’t stop at transactions. It also targets decentralized storage for large files, which is exactly what dApps need if they want to scale. Instead of forcing blockchains to store heavy data, Walrus uses blob storage to handle big unstructured files and erasure coding to distribute them across the network. That design makes storage cheaper, more reliable, and more resilient against censorship. In short, Walrus isn’t trying to replace everything it’s trying to provide a missing layer that Web3 applications can actually build on.
@Walrus 🦭/acc $WAL #walrus