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Cooper bluntly stated that the current L2 market is severely homogenized and lacks real innovation. The core competitiveness of Movement lies in the use of the Move language to improve security, enforceability and audit efficiency. He firmly believes that Move will replace Solidity and become the mainstream language for the next generation of smart contracts. At the same time, he emphasized that the community is the lifeline of the project, and issuing tokens before the mainnet is a key step to ensure decentralization and avoid excessive concentration of power.
Cooper was born in a poor family and tried to change his fate through education, but he was disappointed with the traditional employment path and eventually chose to drop out of school, betting everything on himself and devoting himself to the crypto market. Movement has raised at least $55 million in venture capital so far, and after the launch of the developer mainnet, it has made every effort to accelerate the construction of the ecosystem.
For any emerging blockchain, liquidity is the lifeblood of ecological development, especially in the core scenarios of DeFi, such as indexes and lending. Cooper is well aware of this. He said that his goal is to prepare liquidity for core applications and ensure that the DeFi ecosystem can operate seamlessly when incentives are activated.
In the world of Web3, community is becoming the core driver of project success. Community is the lifeblood of any project. Without community, you might as well give up. Even if you have cutting-edge technology, if no one uses it, the project will not survive. Looking back at the history of the crypto market, some networks and tokens have maintained their price and relevance despite mediocre technology thanks to strong community support. This shows that in today's fierce competition between chains, technology is important, but the activity and loyalty of the community are the key to success. Especially now that there are so many chains competing for the same users, if everyone is competing for the same users, ultimately in my opinion, the key is who can best identify and reward their users and who can build the most organic and active community. It's not just about building cool technology, but giving people something to believe in, something to participate in.