In the Web3 world, the first hurdle for creating a reliable application is whether it can easily access on-chain data.
Many developers have experienced the pain of running their own nodes and building their own indexes, which is both costly and time-consuming. The emergence of Chainbase is like connecting developers to a data faucet; just turn it on, and clean and organized on-chain information flows out.
It packages data from different public chains into a unified API, allowing developers to focus on querying the data using SQL, just like querying a database, without worrying about how the underlying blocks are packaged or how events are triggered. This greatly lowers the barrier to entry, enabling individual developers to quickly test the waters.
Even better, Chainbase supports both historical and real-time data, making it almost effortless to perform DEX analysis, wallet plugins, or blockchain games with just one click.
In the past, obtaining on-chain data was like searching for a water source in the wilderness; now, with Chainbase, developers can directly tap into the pipeline, and that is its value.