《@Chainbase Official paves the Web3 data highway with $C , #chainbase makes multi-chain information easily accessible》
While Web3 developers are still struggling with cross-chain data queries, @Chainbase Official has broken the efficiency bottleneck with decentralized data infrastructure. It acts as a multi-chain data hub, aggregating information from Ethereum, Solana, Polygon, and other chains into a structured index, allowing developers to access real-time data such as transaction flows and address holdings through API calls, eliminating the need to set up complex crawling systems—behind this, the C token is connecting the entire ecosystem with economic incentives.
The core competitiveness of @Chainbase Official lies in its “speed and breadth”: processing millions of queries per second, with historical transaction tracing accurate to milliseconds, and with a practical record of 500 billion data calls, over 24,000 projects consider it a “data engine”. After integrating with a certain DeFi analysis tool, cross-chain liquidity monitoring efficiency increased by 8 times, and user retention rate rose by 30%; even NVIDIA chose to collaborate with it, integrating on-chain data into the real-time decision-making system for autonomous driving, proving that its data reliability has penetrated the boundaries of Web3.
The $C token is the “energy source” of the ecosystem: node operators stake $C to provide storage and computing resources, while developers pay C to access advanced APIs, and the reward mechanism allows contributors to share 50% of the service revenue. This design transforms data processing from “centralized monopoly” to “distributed collaboration”, allowing every participant to benefit.
#chainbase is rewriting the “data rules” of Web3. Liberating developers from cumbersome underlying work, #chainbase proves with C: a good data infrastructure should allow information to be accessed as easily as water and electricity. As more and more applications unleash creativity supported by it, @Chainbase Official may have quietly defined the “data era” of Web3.