Midnight Network made me look at crypto from a completely different angle.
Not from speed, not from fees, and not even from the usual privacy narrative. But from something much more practical. Usability.
Right now, interacting with blockchain still feels complicated for most people. You need to manage wallets, remember keys, deal with gas fees, and always stay careful because one mistake can’t be reversed. For experienced users this feels normal, but for new users it’s overwhelming.
And the truth is, most people don’t stay.
A large number of users try crypto once, face confusion or risk, and then quietly leave. This is something the industry doesn’t talk about enough. Adoption isn’t just about bringing users in. It’s about making them comfortable enough to continue.
This is where @MidnightNetwork started to feel different to me.
Instead of only focusing on backend performance, they seem to be thinking about how people will actually interact with the system. Things like simpler environments and browser-based access show a direction toward making blockchain feel easier, not harder.
Because in reality, if something is not easy to use, people won’t use it consistently.
And if crypto wants to reach a larger audience, it cannot stay technical forever. It has to become simple, smooth, and almost invisible in the background.
We’ve already seen this in other industries. The products that succeed are not always the most advanced ones. They’re the ones that people can use without thinking twice.
While most projects are competing on numbers and performance, Midnight Network seems to be quietly focusing on experience.
And that might not look exciting right now.
But in the long run, it’s one of the few things that actually decides who stays and who gets left behind.
