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Why does Web3 always fail to enter the mainstream world? IDN is trying to solve the last mile problem.
The technology is mature, but users still haven’t come.
In the past few years, Web3’s technical progress has actually been quite rapid.
From blockchain performance to Layer 2 scaling, from DeFi to NFTs, and even to the integration of AI, the entire industry is continuously evolving. The questions have shifted from “Can it be done” to “How fast it can be done,” and technical issues have largely been gradually resolved.
But one reality has never changed: Web3 still hasn’t truly entered the mainstream.
The user base remains relatively limited, and most people’s understanding of blockchain still stays at the level of investment, speculation, or risk, rather than everyday use.
This points to one problem— Web3’s issues are never just technical.
The real obstacle lies in the “usage path,” not the “functional capability.”
From a user perspective, the core of the problem is very straightforward.
An ordinary user, wanting to use Web3, needs to complete a series of complex operations:
Download a wallet
Save the seed phrase
Cross-chain assets
Pay Gas fees
Understand different protocols
This entire process is “common sense” for industry insiders, but for ordinary users, it is a barrier.
That’s also why many people try once and then never come back.
Not because the product is bad, but because the path is too complicated.
In other words, what Web3 lacks is not functionality, but “usability.”
IDN’s Path: Turning Complex Systems into Simple Entry Points
Against this backdrop, looking at the design of IDN Network reveals that it is not solving a single technical problem, but rather “how users can truly access this system.”
IDN does not break down blockchain, wallets, transactions, and applications into separate modules; instead, it attempts to integrate these capabilities into the same system. The significance of this integration lies in reducing the cost for users to switch between different systems.
Especially at the wallet layer, IDN does not treat it merely as an asset storage tool but as the entry point to the entire ecosystem. Users can manage assets, perform transactions, and use applications all within one interface.
This means that the originally scattered operational paths are compressed into a continuous experience.
For users, this change is not reflected in “technical parameters,” but in a simpler question: Is it easier to keep using?
The Last Mile Determines Whether True Adoption Is Possible
In any technological system, moving from “usable” to “popular” requires crossing the last mile.
The internet is like this, mobile payments are like this, and Web3 will be no exception.
This “last mile” is not a technical issue but an experience issue. Whoever can enable users to complete usage without understanding the underlying logic is closer to the mainstream market.
This is also why many projects that seem technically advanced can never expand their user base—they solve “capability,” not “entry.”
Conclusion: The next round of competition is “who can be used by ordinary people.”
Web3 is entering a new phase.
In the past, it was about who could build it, Now, it’s about who can make people actually use it.
IDN Network is trying to turn a complex technical system into a more accessible usage path.
This may not seem “grand,” but it could be the key to whether the industry can truly break into the mainstream.
Because for most people, no matter how advanced the technology is—
what matters is whether they can use it.