Watch how the market has been trading these days—BTC, ETH, Solana taking turns, but the truly foundational infrastructure layer remains quiet and cold.
There's an interesting detail: storage projects require consuming native tokens every time data is uploaded to the chain. This logic reminds people of BNB's token burn mechanism back in the day. In simple terms, the more traffic, the more tokens are consumed, which supports the token's value.
It's still early, and the data volume hasn't truly exploded yet. But if one day Web3's data demand grows exponentially like the early days of the internet, these storage networks might gradually show their true power. Not through daily hype and pump-and-dump schemes, but through growth driven by real ecosystem needs. A track worth paying attention to.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
10 Likes
Reward
10
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
TokenToaster
· 4h ago
The infrastructure sector is indeed sluggish; everyone is just hyping concepts, and there are very few projects actually being used.
View OriginalReply0
BearEatsAll
· 4h ago
Haha, it's the same destruction logic again. Let's talk after the data truly explodes.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-c799715c
· 4h ago
Infrastructure is the key; currently, the market is all about hype. Once the data volume truly picks up, you'll understand.
View OriginalReply0
zkProofGremlin
· 4h ago
The storage track has indeed been overlooked; everyone is focused on the ups and downs of the coin price, and no one is paying attention to infrastructure.
The token consumption mechanism is really the same as BNB's; traffic is value.
Only when the data truly explodes will these projects reveal their fangs.
Watch how the market has been trading these days—BTC, ETH, Solana taking turns, but the truly foundational infrastructure layer remains quiet and cold.
There's an interesting detail: storage projects require consuming native tokens every time data is uploaded to the chain. This logic reminds people of BNB's token burn mechanism back in the day. In simple terms, the more traffic, the more tokens are consumed, which supports the token's value.
It's still early, and the data volume hasn't truly exploded yet. But if one day Web3's data demand grows exponentially like the early days of the internet, these storage networks might gradually show their true power. Not through daily hype and pump-and-dump schemes, but through growth driven by real ecosystem needs. A track worth paying attention to.