If the era of single chains is like an island, then the future multi-chain era is more like an archipelago. There must be routes, trade, and communication between the islands; otherwise, no matter how many islands there are, they will remain isolated from each other. Lagrange's chosen direction is to become the shipping system of this archipelago world.
It is not a vassal of any single chain, but rather a foundational tool for the entire multi-chain ecosystem. Imagine that in the future, users may not care which chain they are using; they only care about whether the functions are user-friendly and whether transactions are smooth. Meanwhile, Lagrange's technology allows data to flow naturally between different chains, and the users are completely unaware of the complexity behind the scenes. This invisible infrastructure value is often the key factor that truly determines the industry landscape.
Just like the early TCP/IP protocol of the internet, which no one talks about every day, but without it, there would be no internet as we know it today. Lagrange's position in the multi-chain world is likely to be such a fundamental piece of the puzzle.