Alex
@a34whatever
Everyone still wants to launch a new blockchain — raise big, ship little, and assume “developers will come.” Spoiler: they won’t. We don’t need another L1. We need a better experience. And that’s what Anoma is building. Even if someone wants to use your app, here’s what they usually have to do: – Install yet another wallet – Learn another chain – Trust a random bridge – Adapt to a whole new UX paradigm It’s not just clunky. It’s unsustainable. Every new app ends up reinventing the same stack: Wallets. Contracts. Bridges. Interfaces. All deeply tied to a specific chain and dev tooling. No wonder onboarding users feels like herding cats. The biggest blocker to mass adoption isn’t scalability. It’s fragmentation. Each chain is its own little world. Every app speaks a different dialect. Every user starts from scratch. Crypto UX is broken — not because it's hard, but because it's scattered.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
Alex
@a34whatever
This is where Anoma flips the script. Anoma isn’t just another chain. It’s a distributed operating system for intent-centric applications — a coordination layer above blockchains. Instead of writing transactions, users express intents: → "I want to swap." → "I want to participate." → "I want to coordinate with X." Anoma figures out how to make it happen — across chains, across actors, across time. Execution becomes invisible. No more wallet jungle. No more protocol-specific logic. No more UX that collapses on first contact with a non-crypto native. Anoma makes fragmented chains feel like one seamless environment. Crypto doesn’t need more chains. It needs coordination. It needs abstraction. It needs apps that feel like apps — not a scavenger hunt. If you're building for the next billion users — build where they’ll actually show up. Not just a chain. Not just infra. A unified experience. That’s what Anoma is doing.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction