Everyone’s talking about modular infrastructure.
But nobody wants to talk about the messy part:
How do you get trustless data across chains — and prove it?
Indexers can show you the data.
Oracles can deliver it.
But in both cases, you’re still trusting someone.
This is where the equation changes.
Because now, instead of trusting a relay, you can ask for proof.
Lagrange lets smart contracts query data from other chains — and verify it with zero-knowledge proofs.
Not trust, not reputation, not multisigs.
Just math.
It means a dApp on Arbitrum can verify votes that happened on Ethereum.
A DeFi protocol can confirm positions held on another rollup.
RWAs, cross-chain incentives, DAO voting, restaking eligibility — all of it becomes interoperable, without needing a middleman.
And that’s where it gets interesting when you think about Chainbase.
They give you structured access to raw blockchain data.
Lagrange makes that data verifiable and portable across chains.
Imagine a future where Chainbase pipes the data,
and Lagrange proves its truth —
a full-stack trustless data and verification layer for Web3.
You don’t need to trust the feed anymore.
You can verify it.
And your contract can, too.
That’s the modular future everyone keeps talking about — and this is the layer that makes it real.