
CM|Oct 15, 2025 03:21
Enso is live! Let’s talk about it from a product perspective.
First of all, this is definitely the kind of story VCs love. It believes that Web3 mass adoption depends on a massive explosion of applications. But compared to traditional app markets, there are only about 4,000 crypto apps. What Enso does is abstract smart contract functions into Actions, simplifying the development process into combinations of these Actions. It already has many real-world use cases:
For example, when Uniswap incentivized Unichain, there was a feature that allowed users to migrate LPs from v2/v3 to v4 on Unichain with one click. The entire process included withdrawal + bridging + redeployment. This feature was jointly developed by Uniswap, LayerZero, and Enso. All the DeFi-level executions involved were primarily achieved through the integration of Enso Actions, while the cross-chain part was handled by LayerZero. Developers didn’t need to build everything from scratch—they could directly use Actions, which significantly reduced development costs.
Enso calls itself the “blockchain shortcut.”
There are many similar cases. Protocols like Yearn, Morpho, and Benqi have all used it. Currently, its biggest application area is providing powerful convenience for functional expansion development of many mainstream protocols. And when the wave of application innovation arrives, its role as a development “booster” could become even more significant.
Its funding comes from Polychain, Multicoin, Spartan, Hypersphere, and others. The tokenomics are mainly designed for fee payments. For example, users need to pay ENSO fees when submitting intents, and developers need to pay fees when calling APIs (routing, packaging). From another perspective, it’s also a unique “developer ecosystem L1,” with its growth driven by developer adoption. There’s also a hidden opportunity here in the combination demands brought by the AI Agent track, which is a key focus for the project’s development.
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