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Tired of frequently encountering performance bottlenecks when trading on L2 networks?
SEI's built-in L1 blockchain adopts a brand-new architectural approach, providing each application with performance guarantees similar to those of exchanges. The parallel EVM engine, combined with sub-400ms finality time, creates a completely different technical realm.
This execution layer solution is exactly the infrastructure needed for the next wave of high-frequency DeFi—supporting the synchronized execution of complex trading logic and eliminating the bottlenecks of traditional L1 in concurrent processing. The entire process from order arrival, execution, to settlement is completed with near real-time latency, opening up new possibilities for strategic traders.
SEI's tech stack may be redefining the performance ceiling of public chains.
What can you do in 400ms? The dream of robot arbitrage... But honestly, I want to see how it performs in real operation, not just theoretical discussions.
The parallel EVM idea is interesting; it seems much more reliable than those patchwork solutions.
Breaking the ceiling is great. Anyway, I go all-in on Monday and cry on Friday. The lower the latency, the faster the losses, haha.
If the performance is really top-notch, can the gas fees be cheaper... That's what I care about most.
But hype aside, whether it can truly support high-frequency trading depends on real-world performance. Many projects have claimed to "redefine performance," only to be taught a lesson by the market in the end. If SEI can really deliver, we can talk again.
Wait, how does this architecture handle MEV protection? Parallel execution often introduces a bunch of new front-running issues. If not handled properly, it's all for nothing.
Finally, someone is building exchange-level performance, no more being tortured by L2.
By the way, can parallel EVM truly solve concurrency issues, or is it just hype?
This time feels different. If real-time settlement can be achieved, high-frequency trading could really showcase some tricks.
SEI is interesting, but we need to see real data to judge.
Another promise of "redefining the performance ceiling," I've seen too many such claims.
But on the other hand, this architectural approach is definitely worth paying attention to.
Hmm, a 400ms finality time feels like worth trying out.
L1s will ultimately have to compete at this performance level, unavoidable.