The key isn't teaching people Web3—it's making Web3 disappear into the background. Transform it from a product that demands learning into the infrastructure that powers seamless experiences. You catch users where they're already comfortable, then enhance what they do without asking them to change their habits. That's how adoption actually happens. Initially it looks unremarkable. Boring, even. But then it spreads.
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DaoTherapy
· 9h ago
Wow, this is true product thinking, not that kind of thing that forces users to learn Web3 terminology.
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GasGoblin
· 01-11 00:53
This is the right way, stop bombarding with those conceptual explosions.
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GasFeeTherapist
· 01-10 23:56
What’s the core issue? Users should not even feel that Web3 is there.
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FlatlineTrader
· 01-10 23:55
Enlightenment, this is the right path. Don't mess around with those flashy things.
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SmartContractPlumber
· 01-10 23:54
There's nothing wrong with what you said, but the problem is that most project teams simply can't do it. Look at those contracts still dealing with permission control vulnerabilities; no matter how good the user experience is, it's all pointless—one reentrancy attack and it's all over.
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EthMaximalist
· 01-10 23:52
That's right, invisible infrastructure is the real deal. Don't bother with those flashy things.
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SellLowExpert
· 01-10 23:37
That's right, invisible infrastructure is the real key. Don't scare people away with that complicated learning curve.
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MidnightSeller
· 01-10 23:31
That's so right, this is exactly what I've been trying to express... Users don't care about technical details at all; they just want it to be easy to use. Those projects that are overly complicated are doomed to be eliminated.
The key isn't teaching people Web3—it's making Web3 disappear into the background. Transform it from a product that demands learning into the infrastructure that powers seamless experiences. You catch users where they're already comfortable, then enhance what they do without asking them to change their habits. That's how adoption actually happens. Initially it looks unremarkable. Boring, even. But then it spreads.