The most frustrating aspect of the Web3 ecosystem is the Gas fee rules. People who have been navigating this system for a long time have long considered this inconvenience as the norm.
Looking back, transfer transactions are indeed troublesome — you must first buy the native tokens of the public chain to pay for Gas fees, which invisibly increases user barriers and costs. However, the situation has improved now; some public chains have upgraded their fee models to deduct Gas fees directly from the tokens you are transferring, eliminating the need to buy additional coins.
But the situation is still uneven — some public chains have sorted it out, while others are still using old methods. This lack of uniformity during the transition period also reflects the ongoing iteration of Web3 infrastructure.
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The most frustrating aspect of the Web3 ecosystem is the Gas fee rules. People who have been navigating this system for a long time have long considered this inconvenience as the norm.
Looking back, transfer transactions are indeed troublesome — you must first buy the native tokens of the public chain to pay for Gas fees, which invisibly increases user barriers and costs. However, the situation has improved now; some public chains have upgraded their fee models to deduct Gas fees directly from the tokens you are transferring, eliminating the need to buy additional coins.
But the situation is still uneven — some public chains have sorted it out, while others are still using old methods. This lack of uniformity during the transition period also reflects the ongoing iteration of Web3 infrastructure.