Xiao Li is a Web3 developer.

His daily work is not to write new features, but to frantically connect various data interfaces.

One set for ETH, another set for BSC, and yet another set for Polygon.

Once data is delayed or interfaces go down, his applications will completely collapse.

Sometimes he thinks: I'm not writing blockchain applications, but just a patchworker for interfaces.

Pain points daily

• When you call data once, you have to wait 30 seconds; users have already closed the page.

• Different chains have different data formats, writing until bald

• Still depends on centralized APIs, which may go offline at any time

The helplessness of developers almost made Xiao Li want to change careers.

Encountering Chainbase

Until one day, he tried Chainbase.

• Unified API: One integration, usable across multiple chains

• Real-time indexing: New blocks update in seconds, response is as fast as local cache

• Verifiability: All results can be traced back, no need to worry about fake data

• Scalability: When the call volume goes up, it remains stable

For the first time, Xiao Li felt that he could focus on writing business logic instead of being a 'patchworker'.

About $C

Xiao Li soon understood, $C

In this system, it is a 'pass':

• Data calls need to use it

• Node staking relies on it

• Good service can also earn rewards

• Community governance can vote

This made him feel that this is not just a tool, but a truly sustainable ecosystem.

Conclusion

For developer Xiao Li, @Chainbase Official brought not a new concept, but a liberation.

It freed him from cumbersome interface work, allowing him to return to the most important thing—creating valuable applications.

This is the meaning of infrastructure.