i keep coming back to $SIGN because most people still look at remittance as just “send money faster” when the real unlock is way bigger.
i think The sleeper thing here is digital sovereignty.
That sounds abstract until you’ve actually dealt with the usual mess: slow rails, random freezes, middlemen eating fees, and zero control once your money leaves your wallet. That’s the part people hate. Not just the delay. The feeling that your own funds move on someone else’s terms.
what makes @SignOfficial

Official interesting is it’s not only about moving value. It’s about proving, authorizing, and owning your actions on-chain in a way that feels native to the internet, not patched onto old finance rails.
In practical terms, that means less begging permission, less friction, and way more control over how identity, agreements, and value flow together.
That’s why I’m watching this one hard. $SIGN feels way bigger than just a payments story.