Lagrange has directly 'retired' the oracle!

Oracles have always played a 'necessary but no alternative' role in Web3. If you want to access off-chain data or interact across chains, you have to rely on a bunch of third-party oracles. But can you really trust these intermediaries? They're slow, expensive, and opaque; if something goes wrong, you can't hold anyone accountable.

Lagrange recognized this pain point and decided to integrate on-chain and off-chain data themselves, creating a super hardcore zkCoprocessor. What can this module do? It can pull state data from any blockchain, or even off-chain APIs, and comes with zero-knowledge proofs to ensure the authenticity of the data source, clarity of the path, and verifiability of the content.

For example: If you want to read the transaction status of a certain address from the Solana chain and then feed it to AI for trend analysis, with traditional methods you would have to: call the oracle → bridge the data → process the data → and then pray nothing went wrong.

But in Lagrange, you only need one SQL query and a bit of LA tokens; the zkCoprocessor will automatically pull the data, perform the validation, and generate the proof, all in one go.

This is not just an efficiency revolution; it's a reconstruction of trust. Data is no longer 'what they say,' but 'what is proven on-chain.' In simple terms, Lagrange is eliminating the most thankless parts of the entire oracle industry.