Zero-knowledge proofs always sound profound and mysterious, and ordinary development teams often shy away.
What Lagrange does here is abstract the complex cryptographic logic, providing modular interfaces and proof services, allowing developers to call upon them in the simplest way.
For example, a team wanting to create cross-chain DeFi, if starting from scratch to design a proof system, might need to invest several months or even years of R&D resources. With Lagrange, they can directly use the ready-made proof layer and focus their energy on application logic and user experience.
This is like programmers in the era of cloud computing, who no longer need to manage physical servers themselves but can complete the same tasks by calling cloud service interfaces. The significance of Lagrange lies not only in the technology itself but also in democratizing zero-knowledge proofs, enabling more teams to genuinely afford and effectively utilize them.