What do talented engineers do when the chair called Meta, Facebook, or whatever it's called now is pulled out from under them? Right — they take their legs and launch their own blockchain. That's how SUI was born. Pronounced as 'sue-ee', but looking at the price, investors sometimes read it differently.
So what are these fugitives from Meta promising us?
Speed. Parallel transaction execution. Confirmation time of 2 seconds. Fees? Almost zero. All of this sounds like a paradise dream for a crypto enthusiast tired of paying 50 bucks to transfer 10 USDT on the Ethereum network. But let's not be naive — we are still talking about cryptocurrency. And cryptocurrency, as we know, is the best way to hand over your money to strangers on the internet under the pretext of 'decentralization'.
SUI runs on Move. If you didn't know — this is the language that was created at Meta for their stillborn Diem. Remember Diem? No? Exactly. But Move survived because engineers decided: 'To hell with Facebook, at least let the language remain.' And now we have SUI and Aptos — two acrobat brothers with the same DNA and different logos.
What are they taking? Infrastructure for Web3, games, NFTs. You've all heard this back in 2021, right? Only then it cost ten times more. Today, SUI is a fresh wrap of old goodness. Naturally, funds like a16z are revolving around them. And where a16z is, there is money. And where there is money, there is a bubble. A bubble that will someday burst… or not. It all depends on how many more people will believe in 'scalable Web3 for the masses'.
But let's be honest. SUI has a chance. Because the blockchain is really fast. Because Move is a good language, not some Solidity with its bugs and holes. And because the crypto market loves good stories. And SUI is a new story.
So, if you don't mind throwing in a few dollars — invest in SUI. Maybe you can recover losses from Aptos. Maybe not. But at least you'll have a reason to say at a party: 'I supported the revolution of parallel transactions.' And if everything collapses — no worries. You can always say that it's the globalists' fault.