In the blockchain world, there's a longstanding challenge—large file storage. Want to put videos, images, NFT resources, or datasets on the chain? The costs are high, the speed is slow, and the experience is just so-so.



A project called Walrus Protocol aims to address this pain point. It runs on the Sui highway, essentially a decentralized cloud drive, but much cheaper, much safer, and far more flexible.

How does it achieve this? Technically, it's quite clever. Walrus breaks your large files into countless small pieces—industry term "fragments"—and then disperses them across nodes worldwide. Even if some nodes go offline, as long as enough fragments remain, the system can instantly restore the original file. This redundancy mechanism ensures reliability.

The cost advantage is particularly obvious. Compared to established players like Filecoin or Arweave, Walrus's storage fees can be 80 to 100 times cheaper. This isn't just marketing talk; it's a real economic calculation. The read speed is also not to be underestimated—responsive enough, suitable for scenarios like gaming, streaming media, and AI models that are sensitive to timeliness.

What's more interesting is the programmable storage feature. Your data isn't just sitting there; it can interact with smart contracts. Set access permissions, manage version iterations, or even let data automatically participate in DeFi interactions or AI inference processes—this opens up a lot of imaginative possibilities. Dynamic NFTs, on-chain AI agents, decentralized identity verification—these new use cases can all be derived from this.

The project token $WAL has a total supply of 5 billion, with about 1.58 billion in circulation (as of January 2026). As the core incentive mechanism of the ecosystem, it has practical functional support.
WAL-8,31%
FIL-2,97%
AR-3,08%
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DegenDreamervip
· 01-08 02:58
Whoa, 80 times cheaper? Isn't that a reason to buy the dip... Filecoin must be crying to death
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ShibaSunglassesvip
· 01-07 16:46
Wait, Filecoin and Arweave are 80 to 100 times cheaper? You really have to see these numbers to believe them.
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ZKProofEnthusiastvip
· 01-07 16:35
80 to 100 times cheaper? Sure, that number sounds outrageous, but Walrus's fragmented storage approach is indeed clever. The key is in programmable storage; the real potential lies in the interaction between data and contracts.
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screenshot_gainsvip
· 01-07 16:22
Wait, has Filecoin been wasted all these years? I find it hard to believe it's 80 to 100 times cheaper.
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