@Caldera Official #Caldera

In the past few years, the narrative of Web3 has mostly remained at the level of 'DeFi gold mining' and 'NFT speculation'. But when it comes to accommodating hundreds of millions of users, the core issues have not changed: public chain congestion, high fees, and fragmented user experience.

The answer provided by @Caldera Official is to make launching chains a 'lightweight matter'. Through the Rollup-as-a-Service model, it modularizes complex underlying technologies, allowing any project to quickly have its own dedicated L2. For teams, this means they can focus their efforts on core applications like building blocks, rather than being bogged down by underlying architecture.

If the previous generation of public chains resembled a single highway with all vehicles crammed together, then Caldera is more like an 'industrial park': each project can have its own independent road while achieving connectivity through standardized bridges. Imagine game companies deploying dedicated chains to support real-time interactions among millions of players; financial institutions building high-performance settlement chains for instant cross-border payments; social platforms putting likes and comments on-chain while still maintaining low costs and high smoothness.

This model reflects a trend: Web3 is moving towards 'networking application chains'. Ultimately, it may not be about 'which chain is the strongest', but rather a value internet made up of hundreds or thousands of Rollups. At that time, users won't need to care about the name of the chain; they will only enjoy an experience that seamlessly integrates with Web2.

Of course, competition and challenges still exist—players like AltLayer and Conduit are also laying out RaaS. But no matter who the final winner is, one thing is certain: modularization, application chains, and interoperability are the key paths for Web3 to truly achieve mass adoption.

@Caldera Official