Honestly, this changed how I look at Sign Protocol.
I knew they were building around attestations, but plugging into real systems like Singpass takes it to another level. This isn’t just on-chain proof anymore. It starts to carry real-world identity and, in some cases, legal weight.
That’s the shift.
Most crypto projects stay inside the Web3 loop. Proofs, badges, verification, all useful but mostly limited to crypto-native use. Sign is quietly breaking that boundary by connecting on-chain actions with systems that actually matter outside the space.
So instead of just “proving something on-chain,” you’re moving toward agreements, credentials, and signatures that can be recognized both digitally and institutionally.
That’s a much bigger deal than it looks.
While everyone’s focused on hype and price, Sign is building the kind of infrastructure that links crypto with real-world trust. And if that direction holds, this is less about a token narrative and more about how verification itself evolves.