I’ve seen a lot of Web3 projects, but @SignOfficial SIGN genuinely made me pause for a moment.
What I find interesting is how it focuses on something most people overlook — proving who deserves what in a digital world. Sounds simple, but in reality, it’s one of the biggest unsolved problems.
From messy airdrops to fake identities and unfair distributions, I’ve seen how broken this layer is. And honestly, without fixing trust and verification, nothing in Web3 can scale properly.
What I like about SIGN is that it doesn’t try to oversimplify things. It accepts that trust is messy, identity is complex, and real-world systems aren’t perfect — and still tries to build around that.
For me, it’s not about hype or token price. It’s about whether this kind of infrastructure can actually make systems fairer and more reliable.
Still early, still risky — but definitely something I’m watching closely.
Because if we can’t verify who deserves what, can any decentralized system really work at scale?

