Brothers, since everyone is shouting 'AI large-scale landing', let's break this layer of window paper directly: most public chains now can't handle the high-frequency turmoil of AI agents at all.
Recently, I helped a few AI intelligent projects with chain reform, and it was really exhausting. The gas fees of the Ethereum system are expensive, not to mention that they are slow. AI makes ten decisions in one second, and it takes half a day to confirm on-chain. This time difference is simply a 'cerebral thrombosis' for intelligent agents.
1. Cross-industry 'dimensionality reduction attack': Microservices in blockchain.
When I went back to test Vanar ($VANRY), I found this project quite interesting. It is not like those hardcore people who are stubbornly focusing on the underlying protocols, but rather it has brought over the logic of the Web2 microservice architecture.
* This feeling is like: you used to push a cart in the mud, and suddenly you were pulled onto the asphalt road.
* Core advantage: It separates computation and verification. Especially that 'semantic storage' design, which allows AI agents to no longer have 'goldfish memory' and finally be able to store some useful historical states.
2. Speaking the truth: How far is it from 'Web3 Google'?
Although it sounds impressive, after a deep experience, Vanar is just a 'potentially promising semi-finished product'.
* Stress test: The officially advertised zero gas interaction occasionally 'drops the chain' during periods of high concurrency, and the delays are not as smooth as stated in the white paper.
* Infrastructure issues: That cross-chain bridge is simply full of complaints; assets take half a day to transfer, and the UI interface logic is as chaotic as a freshman's assignment.
* Current situation: It claims to be the AWS of Web3, but currently, it can at most be considered a newly started Alibaba Cloud that is still fixing the plumbing.
3. Conclusion: Is it a pit or a mine?
This 'semi-finished product' state is actually quite fun. Compared to those already solidified public chains that can't be rolled over, projects like Vanar that are still refining their underlying systems have more imaginative space. If it can really streamline those API interfaces and allow internet developers to adjust chains as easily as adjusting databases, then this wave of 'AI popularization' can really benefit from it.

