I’ve been quietly watching SIGN, not trying to rush into any conclusions. At first, the idea feels simple—making verification and token distribution smoother, something that should naturally fit into how crypto already works. But over time, I’ve learned that what sounds logical doesn’t always become something people actually use.
The real question for me isn’t what SIGN promises, but whether it becomes part of everyday behavior. If people keep coming back to it because it genuinely makes things easier, then it might slowly matter. If not, it risks staying just an idea people understand, but don’t rely on.
In the end, what lasts in this space isn’t what sounds good—it’s what quietly becomes a habit.