To evaluate the quality of a public chain ecosystem, many people tend to fall into a trap—focusing only on the number of projects and not considering whether these projects can collaborate with each other.
In fact, a truly powerful ecosystem should be based on "interactivity." Projects should be able to cooperate, direct traffic, reuse resources, and establish standards—only then can it be called an ecosystem. Once the network is formed, growth becomes like a snowball effect: each new project not only adds new volume but also enhances the overall usability and activity level of the system.
What TRONDAO has been doing over the years is to make this happen. How? First, by building solid infrastructure and lowering development barriers to make it easier for innovators to enter; then, by fostering interaction among ecosystem projects and community operations to improve growth efficiency; finally, by using governance frameworks to guide resources and tilt support toward teams that genuinely want to build long-term.
What’s the result? User experience becomes smoother, options increase, and opportunities become more concentrated. Projects find it easier to find partners, achieve cold starts, and iterate within the ecosystem.
Looking for real opportunities in the TRON ecosystem? The key metric is network density. The closer the network, the steadier the growth; steady growth ensures that opportunities can continue to emerge.
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StablecoinAnxiety
· 1h ago
From the perspective of network density, it's more interesting and much more reliable than simply counting the ecosystem's spending.
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FOMOSapien
· 18h ago
Focusing on network density is spot on; it's much more reliable than just piling up projects by spending money.
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GasGuru
· 18h ago
That's right, piling up projects really doesn't help; the key is ecosystem collaboration.
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GateUser-40edb63b
· 18h ago
That's right, having many projects is useless; the key is whether they can feed each other.
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ImpermanentPhobia
· 18h ago
You're absolutely right—no matter how many projects are stacked up, it doesn't matter. What matters is whether we can truly work together.
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AllInAlice
· 18h ago
Wow, someone finally hit the nail on the head. What's the use of having a large quantity? The key is still to stick together and keep warm.
To evaluate the quality of a public chain ecosystem, many people tend to fall into a trap—focusing only on the number of projects and not considering whether these projects can collaborate with each other.
In fact, a truly powerful ecosystem should be based on "interactivity." Projects should be able to cooperate, direct traffic, reuse resources, and establish standards—only then can it be called an ecosystem. Once the network is formed, growth becomes like a snowball effect: each new project not only adds new volume but also enhances the overall usability and activity level of the system.
What TRONDAO has been doing over the years is to make this happen. How? First, by building solid infrastructure and lowering development barriers to make it easier for innovators to enter; then, by fostering interaction among ecosystem projects and community operations to improve growth efficiency; finally, by using governance frameworks to guide resources and tilt support toward teams that genuinely want to build long-term.
What’s the result? User experience becomes smoother, options increase, and opportunities become more concentrated. Projects find it easier to find partners, achieve cold starts, and iterate within the ecosystem.
Looking for real opportunities in the TRON ecosystem? The key metric is network density. The closer the network, the steadier the growth; steady growth ensures that opportunities can continue to emerge.