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How far a public chain ecosystem can go often doesn't depend on the momentary brilliance of a single project, but on whether the entire system's collaborative ability can continue to operate effectively.
What does this mean? The entry cost for developers, the efficiency of project resource acquisition, the long-term engagement of the community, and whether various applications can form a mutually accelerating network effect—these seemingly scattered links actually determine the resilience of the entire ecosystem.
The core significance of the DAO governance framework lies here: it is not for short-term marketing hype, but to connect these dispersed elements into an organic system. From project incubation to the maturity of the application ecosystem, each step has a clear path and explicit incentive mechanisms. What are the benefits of doing this? It can turn promotion into a truly long-term effort, rather than a short-lived sprint.
For ordinary users, the most practical benefit of following official ecosystem developments is "actionability." Clearer nodes, more defined pathways, lower learning costs—these advantages, when accumulated to a certain extent, will generate cognitive compound interest. At critical moments, this compound interest will directly translate into your action efficiency and the certainty of your results. Keep the main line close, and subsequent benefits will be much greater.