When it comes to AI project tracks, most people's minds are filled with grand narratives and future imaginings. But only after hands-on experience do they realize that those projects that survive are usually not the ones with the loudest hype, but the ones with the most user-friendly products.



Nowadays, many projects are caught in a strange cycle—rushing to tell stories, eager to package them, afraid that the market won't hear them. Instead, they overlook the most fundamental thing: what users truly need. This reversal of priorities may generate short-term buzz, but in the long run, it will only lead to falling behind.

The projects that truly go far are quite the opposite. They are patient and composed, starting from users' pain points, refining their products thoroughly before speaking. This pace may seem less "sexy," but it is solid. In the fast-paced Web3 world of rapid iteration, this patience often becomes the most scarce competitive advantage.
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GasFeeCryervip
· 11h ago
Really, the projects that boast every day are now dead. Product strength is the key; everything else is superficial. No matter how good the packaging is, if users don't buy it, it's all in vain. This argument makes sense; I've seen too many projects that cut leeks. Solid fundamentals > stories, always holds true.
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TokenomicsDetectivevip
· 11h ago
There are stories about projects everywhere, but after trying a few, you realize most of them are just paper tigers. This is what I want to hear—stop promising empty promises every day. Product strength is the real key; everything else is just superficial.
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ZenChainWalkervip
· 11h ago
To be honest, most project teams have already lost when they start telling stories. The ones that can survive this wave are those who quietly refine their products, with vastly superior user experience. Competing with stories is not as good as competing with products, brother. After seeing too many PPT pitches for fundraising, I feel that truly hardworking teams are extremely scarce. Products speak for themselves; everything else is just talk.
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degenwhisperervip
· 11h ago
Really, I just can't stand those projects that boast every day. The user experience is terrible, what are they pretending for? Honestly, only the teams that can make good products are truly impressive; everything else is just talk. Another track blinded by marketing, it's time to wake up. It feels like 90% of the projects now are paper tigers—they hype up and then run away. Those who can stay calm and refine their products are becoming fewer and fewer. I'm a bit tired. I'd rather have a usable product than a story.
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