Why is $WCT the future of Web3 interoperability?

@walletconnect, as the core infrastructure connecting decentralized applications and wallet protocols, is redefining how users interact with blockchains. Its latest release, WalletConnect v2.0, significantly lowers the user operation threshold through multi-chain support (such as Ethereum, Solana, Cosmos) and an enhanced security framework. For example, users only need to scan once to authorize DApp transactions, without repeatedly switching wallets, greatly improving the smooth experience in scenarios like DeFi and NFTs.

Currently, the core value of the $WCT token lies in governance and protocol incentives:

Governance rights: Holders can vote to determine the direction of protocol upgrades (such as adding support for new chains or adjusting fee models);

Fee capture: Future plans include charging small service fees for high-frequency commercial applications, with part of the income used for token buybacks, forming a deflationary mechanism.

In the short term, with the explosion of new use cases like AA wallets (account abstraction) and on-chain identities, the integration demand for @walletconnect will surge (e.g., Binance's Web3 wallet has already integrated this protocol). In the long term, if it can become the 'HTTP-level protocol' of Web3, the valuation of WCT may benchmark against other infrastructure tokens like MATIC or $LINK.

$WCT #WalletConnect @WalletConnect