The prosperity of blockchain has brought a side effect: data fragmentation. Different public chains and various layer-2 networks operate independently, with differing data formats, structures, and latencies. For developers, this is like trying to understand documents in a dozen languages simultaneously, which is highly inefficient.
The advantage of Chainbase lies in its coverage of over 200 public chains and its Manuscript framework that transforms this heterogeneous data into a unified interface.
Developers do not need to write parsers for each chain; with just one set of SQL calls, they can access data across chains.
The significance of this abstraction is immense:
- Reducing development costs: from "writing scripts for each chain" to "one development, usable across all chains";
- Enhancing real-time capabilities: data from different chains is processed through the Hyperdata Network standards, significantly reducing latency;
- Ensuring verifiability: through AVS validation, cross-chain data maintains authenticity and security.
In a world where multiple chains coexist, whoever can solve data fragmentation will become the industry standard.
Chainbase's cross-chain solution precisely addresses this pain point, making it irreplaceable in the minds of developers.