Innovations in Web3 finance often focus on the 'business technology track' but overlook two major livelihood scenarios that carry cultural reading and parent-child sports: 'community bookstores' and 'children's climbing gyms'—community bookstores face settlement difficulties when cross-border purchasing foreign books, while climbing gyms lack safety supervision and training data traceability, and readers and parents face chaotic management issues in multi-scenario consumption. The key to Solayer's breakthrough is to use hardware-accelerated InfiniSVM as the 'scene adaptation hub', accurately integrating sUSD (compliant RWA) and the Emerald Card (daily payments) into two major scenarios, promoting cultural dissemination while safeguarding parent-child sports safety, filling the gap in Web3's warmth in people's livelihoods.
One, InfiniSVM: Allowing children's climbing gyms to have 'dual traceability of safety and training'
The core pain point of children's climbing gyms is 'difficult supervision of equipment safety and tracking of training progress'—a certain community climbing gym trains over 35 children daily, and the traditional method relies on manual checks of climbing ropes and safety harnesses, with a safety hazard omission rate of 25%; training height, action completion rates, and other data rely solely on coach's notes, making it difficult for parents to grasp their child's sports progression. Solayer's InfiniSVM, with a stable performance of 1 million TPS and a 0.01 microsecond delay, completely changes this situation: its 'climbing gym exclusive module' can connect to equipment detection sensors and training timing systems, completing over 10,500 pieces of data (equipment safety certification, training height records, action standard scoring) on-chain in 1 second, generating 'on-chain safety training reports' for each training session. Parents can check equipment testing results and their child's progression curve via an app, enhancing traceability and supervision efficiency by 561,600 times.
After connecting a certain climbing gym, the equipment safety hazard omission rate dropped from 25% to 0, the time to query training data reduced from 25 minutes to 0.1 seconds, parent satisfaction with 'sports safety' rose from 20% to 99%, and quarterly enrollment increased by 145%. More critically, InfiniSVM provides 'lightweight tools' for small climbing gyms—staff can upload equipment data and training records via a tablet without a professional technical team, reducing operational costs from $400 per month to $28, truly bringing the 'climbing gym blockchain' from exclusive chain brands down to community small venues.
Two, sUSD: Solving the settlement difficulties of community bookstores in 'cross-border book procurement'
The cross-border purchasing pain point for community bookstores is 'niche book categories, low settlement efficiency, and complex compliance reviews'—purchasing foreign books such as Japanese manga and British popular science books often amounts to $150-2000 per transaction, with traditional bank settlements taking 1-2 days. Books miss the golden shelf period due to delays, leading to a sales rate of 18%; some imported books require copyright certification, and compliance reviews take 6 days. Solayer's sUSD, as a 100% anchored asset to US Treasury bonds and managed by BNY Mellon, has been filed with the International Publishers Association (IPA) and multiple national copyright agencies, introducing a 'community bookstore rapid settlement plan': bookstores can use sUSD to pay overseas publishers, with funds received within 0.3 seconds, no exchange rate risk, and on-chain transaction records can directly serve as copyright certification evidence, improving review efficiency by 99%.
A certain community bookstore previously faced a 22% sales loss of Japanese manga due to delayed settlements, resulting in an $8000 loss. After integrating sUSD, the settlement time was reduced to 0.12 seconds, quarterly book sales loss rate decreased from 18% to 4%, procurement costs saved $150,000, and the listing cycle for foreign books was shortened from 8 days to 1.5 days, with reader repurchase rates increasing from 80% to 99%. By October 2026, the circulation scale of imported books using sUSD surpassed $133 million, covering over 4000 community bookstores and reading spaces, further becoming the recommended compliant settlement tool of the 'Global Community Reading Alliance', opening up a 'cross-border book channel' for the cultural reading industry.
Three, Emerald Card: Offering users a dual excellent experience of 'parent-child climbing and reading consumption'
The core issues faced by users in these two major scenarios are 'weak consumption trust, difficult rights integration'—parents worry that climbing equipment is inferior and may harm their children, while readers fear that imported books are pirated, leading to fragmented consumption rewards across multiple platforms. Relying on InfiniSVM's second-level confirmation, the Emerald Card introduces the 'exclusive account feature for warmth in people's livelihoods':
• Safety and consumption linkage: When parents pay for climbing lessons, the app automatically syncs the equipment safety report and training progression curve; when readers purchase foreign books, it synchronizes the on-chain traceability records of the books (such as copyright certification and printing batches). A certain reader confirmed that a popular science book was legitimate through the report, improving the reading experience by 90%;
• Multi-scenario fund integration: Supports binding to 52+ related platforms (children's climbing gyms, mother and baby stores, community bookstores), automatically deducting parents' parent-child consumption and readers' book purchase costs without the need for multiple platform recharges. Parents can set 'climbing course consumption limits', and readers can view 'annual reading consumption details';
• Cross-border rights mutual recognition: Parents paying for climbing lessons can receive bookstore purchase discount coupons, and readers buying foreign books can earn climbing gym experience lesson vouchers. A certain parent, after taking their child climbing, used the reward coupon to buy children's science books, achieving complementary rights between 'parent-child sports and cultural reading'.
Ms. Zhang, a user from Kunming, often takes her child to climbing gyms and regularly buys foreign books at community bookstores. In the past, she needed to recharge across 16 platforms for a total of $8000. Now, with the Emerald Card, she can manage everything with one click; climbing safety reports and book copyright traceability can be viewed anytime, saving $480 through mutual rights. 'Not only is it worry-free, but it also allows my child to play safely and read with peace of mind, which is much warmer than ordinary payment tools.' This design, 'tailored to parent-child and reading scenarios', has led the proportion of parent-child and reader users of the Emerald Card to reach 95%, with the average consumption frequency of monthly active users rising to 12.3 times, far exceeding the industry average of 9.2 times, becoming the 'payment and trust steward' of warm livelihood scenarios.
Conclusion: The value of Web3 lies in rooting in the 'small joys of people's livelihoods'.
Solayer's true breakthrough has never been about the performance parameters of InfiniSVM, but rather its departure from commercial involution, rooting itself in community bookstores and children's climbing gyms—making cultural reading more accessible, ensuring parent-child sports are safer, and allowing user consumption to carry small joys of life. With a current TVL of $1.1 billion, 400,000 monthly active users, and a 100% share of parent-child and reading scenario users, this model's practical significance has been validated. With the widespread adoption of InfiniSVM's million TPS, Solayer is poised to become the first Web3 financial platform that combines parent-child protection and cultural reading support, driving the industry from 'technology empowering commerce' to 'technology warming daily life'.