After the Ethereum Dencun upgrade, the Layer2 battle is becoming increasingly intense. Among a bunch of projects, one thing has attracted a lot of attention—it didn't follow the traditional compressed transaction route but instead adopted a "Lego block" style approach called modular blockchain. Simply put, it separates execution, settlement, and consensus, then flexibly combines them as needed, allowing developers to customize their own chain environment based on their application's characteristics. It sounds a bit complicated, but it's actually quite clever.



Here are some technical highlights:

First is the design of parallel processing. Through the sub-chain parallel mechanism, transactions can run simultaneously on multiple chains, with theoretically unlimited throughput, fundamentally eliminating network congestion. This is especially friendly for high-frequency application scenarios.

Second is the Data Availability Sampling (DAS) scheme. This system ensures security while significantly reducing data storage costs, offering a clear cost advantage.

Third is cross-chain interoperability. Asset flow within the ecosystem is seamless, and interaction with mainstream networks like Ethereum is also very smooth, with security guaranteed.

Regarding the core asset of the ecosystem, it's not just a Gas token. It more importantly carries governance rights, maintains network security, and facilitates the value flow of the entire ecosystem. Token holders can participate in network maintenance through staking and earn rewards, as well as voice their opinions and vote on major decisions, influencing the technical direction. This design makes the token more deeply connected to the network.
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TideRecedervip
· 12h ago
This modular approach is indeed excellent, much smarter than simply compressing transactions, and feels like a real breakthrough.
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VitalikFanboy42vip
· 12h ago
This modular approach is indeed impressive, but can it really outperform Arbitrum and Optimism?
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GovernancePretendervip
· 12h ago
Modular gameplay is indeed excellent. Compared to those schemes that simply compress transactions, this approach is more flexible. Wait, can DAS costs really be cut so drastically? It seems a bit exaggerated. Earning yields through staking sounds good, but it requires someone to buy in first. I remain skeptical about the claim of unlimited throughput with parallel processing. Token governance rights are the real focus here; being able to vote is the true say. Could this architecture actually increase the complexity of the chain and make future maintenance a nightmare? Smooth cross-chain interoperability? We've seen so many projects fail before. The Lego brick analogy is quite vivid, but building with Lego is simple; building a blockchain is a different story. Holding tokens to participate in maintenance? It depends on whether there's a real incentive mechanism—don't want another empty gesture.
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PortfolioAlertvip
· 12h ago
Lego brick style? Sounds like a good idea, but I'm worried it might just be another PPT wealth creation scheme. The modular logic is indeed interesting, but can it really take off? Parallel processing sounds great, but in reality, the pitfalls of sharding are numerous; it depends on who can fill them. Is it true that DAS costs are being cut, or is this just another prelude to a new round of cutting the leeks? Regarding token governance rights, it seems big players are about to once again cut small investors.
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