All along, the on-chain experience of Web3 has relied on a group of centralized relay nodes to 'hold the fort'.

Who cares about this thing?

Most people don't care, but if you really want to earn money in the future, don't overlook the pricing power of connections.

🛣️ On-chain communication is like a highway:

The project is the vehicle, the wallet is the driver, and the connection is the toll booth.

Now think about it:

Who built the toll booths? Who is collecting this 'toll fee'?

In the past, we had no choice; we relied on official nodes for maintenance, free but controlled.

It's different now; there's a project that has sent out a signal—

'I want to hand over these toll booth permissions to the community.'

💡 I've studied its mechanism; it's real:

• Relay node permissions will gradually decentralize; anyone can deploy them

• Network traffic will be measured in native tokens, and nodes can collect fees

• Wallets and application connection services must go through these nodes

• Users won't notice, but value will silently flow on the chain

• The native token is the only 'pass' for transactions

You're not mistaken; its token will be the foundational settlement layer for on-chain connections in the future.

🧨 Now the question arises:

If this connection becomes the industry standard, then whoever holds the nodes will control the traffic on the chain.

Holding a bit of WCT is not about speculating on coins, but like buying a piece of 'on-chain real estate' early.

It doesn't rely on hype, but is genuinely building the Web3 connection layer's BGP.

I've already started researching how to deploy nodes. Not to earn money today, but to focus on the future connection infrastructure.

Do you think this road is reliable?

Isn't the 'traffic entry rights' on the chain an overlooked long-term value?

Let's chat in the comments section 👇#WalletConnect $WCT

@WalletConnect