At the end of May, A Unbreakable 1U Live Stream Eating Shit

Other projects are becoming 'EOS-ified', but A has already completed its rebirth!

Once famous for its powerful technology, EOS fell into silence due to the long-term cashing out and lack of development by its founding company Block.one (B1).

However, the failure of EOS is not the end. It has been awakened by the community and reshaped into a brand new A through '1:1 voluntary swap' — completely cutting off B1's control, discarding the old model, and restarting from mechanisms, governance, and incentive structures, completing a thorough self-revolution.

A no longer relies on financing to tell stories, nor does it have capital foundations controlling it. It is driven by real tasks on-chain and community participatory governance, building a decentralized new order. Learning from past lessons of 'superficial decentralization but actually highly centralized', A is among the first projects to actively depart from the old model.

Ironically, many other mainstream public chains are gradually stepping onto the old path of 'EOS-ification': foundations have too much say, project technology stagnates, and users are merely tools for market value; some have even started to 'B1-ify', frequently hyping concepts, airdropping for momentum, and community participation is weakening.

Today's A has achieved 'self-rescue from centralization', while other chains are replicating the history of EOS. A is not just another new coin, but a rare new paradigm that has truly emerged from failure. The future belongs to those projects that dare to revolutionize themselves, not to those that package old shells to tell new stories in a false narrative.

$EOS