Written by: Noir
Compiled by: Chopper, Foresight News
The failure of Web3 has never been due to a lack of creativity. In fact, its problem lies in its inability to resonate with people.
Most of the current Web3 narratives are filled with abstract concepts: public chains, infrastructure, protocols, layers... These terms are not wrong! But they lack any "human touch," making it impossible for ordinary people to feel a connection.
This is precisely where the value of storytelling comes in. In the Web3 field, the importance of storytelling far exceeds that of any other industry.
Web3 Is Built on Logic but Lacks Emotional Resonance
In other fields, people already come with a cognitive context. For example: talking about food can stimulate your appetite; discussing fitness can make you visualize progress; mentioning travel will immediately bring to mind the scenery of the destination.
But Web3 simply cannot do this. Creators and project teams are always painstakingly explaining how amazing those invisible systems and intangible processes are.
Without stories as a foundation, all of this seems distant and cold.
In short: utterly boring. Clearly, no one will pay for something boring.
Stories Are the Gateway for Ordinary People to Enter Web3
Most creators and project teams are eager to explain upfront how something works. But they forget that a good story always begins by describing how it feels.
Confusion, laughter, relief, vulnerability... these emotions are completely absent in Web3 narratives.
Friend, if this trend continues, the outcome is self-evident. Even if people don’t understand the technology, these emotions are universal. The key is that when someone recognizes familiar feelings in a story, they will instinctively follow you to hear your subsequent professional explanations.
Stop Listing Features; Talk More About User Experience Moments
Compare two ways of expression, and the difference is clear.
Feature-first version: This feature improves the system’s scalability by optimizing throughput.
There’s nothing wrong with this statement, but it’s forgettable, and... what does it even mean?😂
Story-first version: I kept refreshing the page, mentally prepared to wait again... only to find that the transaction had already been completed.
The same core information, but the latter has more warmth and is easier to understand.
Storytelling isn’t about downplaying technology; it’s about preparing the listener’s brain to receive complex information.
Got it? I hope you understand. Let’s continue...
Complex Concepts Need Real-Life Scenarios to Land
When faced with complex problems, people ask themselves: "What does this have to do with me?"
And stories can subtly provide the answer. All it takes is a simple real-life scenario to make the connection.
You don’t actually need to explain every detail. You just need to showcase a key moment: a frustrating bottleneck, a moment of relief, a small victory.
That’s enough to make a complex concept feel real and tangible.
Practical Validation: This Methodology Really Works
The core of my work is creating story-centric video content for Web3 bounty campaigns and sponsors.
Over time, I’ve noticed a pattern: the videos that win are never the ones with the most hardcore technical explanations, but those that begin with moments full of human touch.
I don’t start by listing features or explaining principles. Instead, I focus on these scenes: the initial awkwardness of using a product for the first time; the stumbling before understanding a function; the sudden clarity when everything finally connects.
This narrative approach always keeps viewers engaged longer and helps them understand faster. This is also why my videos stand out in bounty competitions.
It’s not because I explain more technology, but because I make complex concepts feel human and emotionally warm.










