In Web3, I keep seeing the same pattern. If something hasn’t failed yet, people start treating it like it can’t fail at all.
I remember this one app my cousin showed me. Everything looked a bit off, and I told him I didn’t trust it. But he still invested $150. The app promised daily returns, and for the first week, it actually worked. He got paid $75 and suddenly it felt real.
That’s the dangerous part.
Because once something starts working, we stop questioning it. But before the month even ended, the app disappeared. Just like that and he lost $75. So, my point is, if something looks stable now, it doesn't mean it will always be safe.
That experience is still stuck with me.
Now when I look at systems like the @MidnightNetwork , I see things differently. The network looks smooth, proofs verify, everything passes. Nothing seems wrong.
But nothing wrong yet doesn’t always mean nothing wrong at all.
Especially in systems where a lot happens in private layers, the real issues don’t always show up early. They show up when things are pushed, stressed, or scaled.
So I’m not judging Midnight Network,
I’m just not using "it hasn’t failed yet" as a reason to trust $NIGHT blindly.
If anything, that’s exactly why I’m paying closer attention to #night and Midnight Network.