Why Does Crypto Always Build 'Casinos', But Rarely Creates 'Indispensable Products'?

marsbitPublished on 2026-06-08Last updated on 2026-06-08

Abstract

The article explores why cryptocurrency has primarily fostered speculation rather than essential, "sticky" consumer products. It introduces the concept of "sofalarity"—the point where a platform's convenience becomes so ingrained that leaving feels unthinkable. While Big Tech creates this lock-in through ecosystem control and data harvesting, crypto lacks equivalent everyday utility. Its appeal hinges on the variable rewards of price volatility, akin to gambling, which drives engagement but not dependency. The author argues crypto's core promise—fixing opaque backend systems like correspondent banking—solves problems most people never see or feel, failing to deliver a tangible "aha moment" of improved daily life. This need for explanation hinders mass adoption. Meanwhile, platforms like Google and Meta monetize vast behavioral data, a treasure trove crypto's transparent ledgers (recording only financial transactions) cannot match for predictive insight. The piece further questions whether crypto's potential lies in consumer super-apps or, more plausibly, in becoming enterprise-grade infrastructure—modern settlement rails. It concludes with a critical look at Real-World Asset (RWA) tokenization, suggesting it may merely digitize and accelerate corporate extraction (e.g., in housing or healthcare) rather than democratize access, as the technology itself is a neutral tool. True disruption, the author implies, requires building sovereign systems outside exploitative platforms.

Written by: Thejaswini MA

Compiled by: Plain Talk Blockchain

"Sofalarity." This is my favorite word this month / this year (depending on what I read next).

It dawned on me belatedly that my own exhaustion was precisely the state this system needed me to be in to keep it running, and it wasn't my personal failure. I slumped on the bamboo sofa, in a posture that would absolutely cause back pain, and asked Alexa to brighten the lights. Because what I just read was starting to feel a bit uncomfortable and too personal.

Everyone knows the "singularity," the theoretical point where AI surpasses human intelligence and everything changes forever. We're not there yet, but "sofalarity" is already in this room with us.

This is the point where convenience itself has become so absolute that leaving a platform feels almost as impractical as moving to another country where you might not find a bamboo sofa.

The ecosystem you choose to stay in seems to have no drama or friction, offering conveniences that tangibly improve your life. But you can see friction everywhere else; that's why we keep making the same choices. But is it really your own choice, or was the choice already made for you?

This book describes a phenomenon I think most of us are aware of but can't find the vocabulary for. That (comfortably) heavy feeling of staying on a platform you're not even sure you like. The feeling of wanting to switch platforms isn't impossible, but somehow exhausting before it even begins. The author borrows a term from stoner culture to describe it: "couch lock." The meaning is self-explanatory.

As always, my mind immediately drifted back to cryptocurrency (crypto). Can we ever build a product smooth enough to give people "couch lock"? Or have we already made that promise, tried, and failed miserably? Are we completely outside the comfortable consumer haven, or are we just stuck at its bottom?

Look at how these apps get us hooked using what psychologists call a "variable reward schedule." This is the slot machine effect that makes gambling addictive, and it's everywhere in crypto. Price volatility acts as one of the most powerful slot machines ever. Most positions don't move much. Occasionally, some assets pump 10x. This unpredictability triggers a compulsive checking behavior, just like refreshing Instagram notifications or TikTok videos.

Crypto's variable reward system skips the platform, pulling people directly towards price charts, where a trader's dopamine accumulates. It lacks the habitual, systemic dependence that big tech platforms profit from. This probably explains why, after fifteen years, speculation remains the only consistently delivered consumer-grade product crypto can offer.

Wu explains why platforms spend tens of billions on things that seem unrelated to their core business. Google paying $17 billion for NFL broadcast rights, or Amazon spending $11 billion for Thursday Night Football. The target is time. They want to control enough of your Sundays that your entire week naturally revolves around one company's interface.

Every hour you spend inside a platform's ecosystem is an hour you're not spending thinking about whether a better option exists elsewhere.

For people in India, there are two choices to watch *The Office*: Netflix and Amazon Prime. Amazon offers perks that make it a good choice, and there are many privileges ready for Prime users.

"If it's easy, it wins," Wu says.

Borderless money, self-custody, and transparent systems are all good. But this pitch requires you to first convince someone that something they think isn't broken is actually broken. Most people walking down the street aren't thinking about how to fix correspondent banking.

The internet's "convenience gap" was obvious to everyone. "You don't have to drive to the post office anymore." Okay, sold.

The before-and-after was obvious, instant. Crypto's gap is equally real, but almost completely invisible to the average person living in it. This inefficiency lives inside institutions, inside settlement layers, inside correspondent banking systems most people will never need to understand. "Replaced all that with a blockchain" sounds like pure alien language to an average user.

The internet replaced things that annoyed *everyone*. Driving to a travel agent to book a flight was annoying. Going to a video store to rent a movie was annoying; go late, someone else had already taken it. When the internet removed these barriers, people felt the difference immediately because it made their lives comfortable. People accepted it when you explained these solutions.

Crypto is replacing things most people have never thought about. An average person sending money to family abroad just knows it takes days and costs money. They likely don't know what correspondent banking is. They don't care that their $200 remittance has to pass through three or four intermediary banks before reaching its destination, each taking a fee. They just know the money gets there, more or less, and they'll do it again next month.

If you switch this entire system to blockchain technology, the sender's experience feels largely the same. It might be faster. Fees might be lower. Yet, nothing visibly changes in their life. They don't have a 'aha, I never have to do that again' moment. That's the problem.

Adoption has always been the challenge for this industry, not for users. As long as crypto still needs to be explained to be understood, no matter how good the tech, it will always belong to the "nerd" category.

What else is crypto missing? The chapter on data needs to look at this problem from a completely new perspective.

Google and Meta made a total of $360 billion in ad revenue in 2024 because they spent twenty years collecting your every move. Every scroll or long pause on a post helped them build a machine that can predict your next move. Brands pay tens of billions for that prediction. And we built this engine for them entirely for free, starting from our first account.

Wu compares this to a poker tournament where your opponent has watched every hand you've ever played. They remember your bluffs and worst calls. They're playing completely within the rules, but they've read your mind. This advantage, stacked over billions of individual games, ultimately spawned massive corporate empires.

I think about whether crypto has anything similar. No, I don't mean prediction markets.

Bitcoin's entire blockchain (every transaction since 2009) is about 611 GB. Meta processes more data than that every few hours. Ethereum's on-chain data is richer, but it only captures financial behavior: wallet addresses, transaction amounts, and protocol interactions. It shows what someone did with money, but offers no insight into the "why." It misses the countless tiny daily choices that make behavioral prediction commercially valuable.

900 million people use ChatGPT weekly, sharing work documents, medical questions, their anxieties, and business strategies. It helps them. They don't see the privacy trade-off when using it.

It's unrealistic to turn around and ask the same audience, who often hand over their private search history and location data for daily convenience, to suddenly care deeply about financial autonomy and transparent ledgers. Some do care. Some care but are busy with work. This pitch only appeals to those already convinced. This approach is ineffective for growth if you want mass adoption and to create "everything apps."

Wu takes issue with Shoshana Zuboff's views on "surveillance capitalism." She claims platforms create Skinner boxes. They're like little games that trick our brains into checking them over and over by giving us surprise rewards. He counters that large-scale attention manipulation existed long before the internet's big data. On this point, I agree with him.

Goebbels didn't need a recommendation algorithm. Yes, the framework of "totalitarian control" is a bit overblown.

Look at variable reward schedules. As we discussed at the article's start, crypto has them too. The way prices keep going up and down is like a giant, exciting surprise game. But that feeling of excitement never locks you into a practical, daily application.

The more you rely on a tool, the worse you become at doing that thing without it. When the tool is just a calculator, it's no big deal. But when the tool is infrastructure owned and controlled by someone else, it gets complicated.

Crypto has been recreating this problem over and over. Developers build on sequencers they cannot control. Protocols depend on liquidity providers who can leave anytime. Applications attach themselves to chains run by a handful of validators. Each layer feels progressive, but not quite. You built something on someone else's foundation, and now you can't move without their permission. Web2 is the same shape. AWS goes down, half the internet goes with it.

Now, we can circle back to the IBM analogy. IBM dominated its era by building elite enterprise-grade infrastructure and letting the application layer run on top of it, completely bypassing the fight for consumer 'couch lock.'

Crypto's best-case reality might look more like this, something we only realized recently. Settlement rails, institutional clearing, cross-border infrastructure—no one wants to rebuild these from scratch.

It's a significant achievement, even if it's completely different from the dream of consumer super-apps.

In the book's second half, it shifts from tech to expose how the same corporate playbook dominates healthcare and housing. I think it's important to mention this.

Welsh, Carson, Anderson and Stowe bought up anesthesia practices across cities because a patient under anesthesia cannot shop around. Prices rose 26% between 2012 and 2017. One patient even received a bill for $108,951.

Invitation Homes has spent $150 million per week since 2012 buying foreclosed homes, now owns over 110,000 properties, paid a $48 million FTC settlement in 2024, and mailed average $106 refund checks to 444,131 tenants. Yet rents still rose 4.5% the quarter after the settlement.

We pitch RWA tokenization as the best tool for financial inclusion, arguing fractionalized real estate will make wealth more accessible. But does splitting a house into digital tokens really help a local buyer compete with a company spending $150 million per week on acquisitions?

All it does is digitize inventory for the giants. Large corporations own 1% of housing nationwide, but they control 25% of housing in Atlanta and 21% in Jacksonville.

A more liquid crypto layer only makes it easier for Wall Street to buy out these markets. Tokenization cannot stop corporate landlords; it just builds them a faster ledger for collecting rent. Crypto here acts as a double-edged sword, it is entirely neutral, not an automatic savior.

The platform model merely accelerates extraction, making the process incredibly efficient and inescapable. A private equity firm with a single anesthesia clinic runs an isolated business. But when a single entity buys all clinics in major metropolitan hubs, the game changes completely. Coordinating through shared software, corporate owners raise fees uniformly across hundreds of medical facilities. Individual doctors operate in the dark, unable to see the full picture of the trap. This is old greed running on upgraded infrastructure.

Wu is very careful in drawing lines. I am less so. The deep mechanics of these industries reveal a slow-moving primitive accumulation process within the American middle class. This corporate transformation essentially forces doctors back into being standardized labor and traps homeowners in lifelong rental serfdom.

The corporate platform model relies entirely on trapped audiences and centralized gates. And we have a technology fundamentally designed to smash those gates. It gives sovereign individuals the tools to build their own systems, completely out of reach of the extractive class. That's the moat.

Related Questions

QAccording to the article, why does cryptocurrency often result in 'casinos' rather than indispensable products?

AThe article argues that cryptocurrency primarily functions through a 'variable reward schedule' system, similar to gambling, where price volatility acts like a powerful slot machine. This triggers compulsive checking and speculative behavior, making speculation the only consistently offered consumer-grade product. It lacks the habitual, system-wide dependency that creates 'couch lock' (comfortable reliance) in successful consumer platforms.

QWhat is the 'convenience gap' as discussed in the article, and how does it differ between the internet and cryptocurrency?

AThe 'convenience gap' refers to the immediate, tangible improvement a user feels when a new technology solves a visible, annoying problem in their life. The internet solved obvious problems like driving to a travel agency or video store. Cryptocurrency, however, aims to solve inefficiencies in systems like correspondent banking that most people never think about. The user's experience of sending money remains largely the same, lacking a transformative 'aha' moment, making adoption a challenge for the industry.

QWhat key data advantage do platforms like Google and Meta have that cryptocurrency currently lacks, according to the author?

APlatforms like Google and Meta have a massive data advantage built over decades by tracking users' every online move, scroll, and interaction. This data creates a machine that predicts user behavior, which advertisers pay billions for. In contrast, cryptocurrency blockchains primarily record financial transactions (what was done), capturing only a fraction of data and missing the vast amount of behavioral context (the 'why') that makes prediction commercially valuable.

QWhat is the article's perspective on the real-world impact of tokenizing assets like real estate (RWAs)?

AThe article presents a skeptical view, arguing that tokenizing Real-World Assets (RWAs) like housing can be a double-edged sword. While pitched as a tool for financial inclusion, it may not help local buyers compete against large corporate landlords. Instead, it could simply digitize and make corporate holdings more liquid, potentially allowing Wall Street to acquire property markets even more efficiently. Crypto acts as a neutral tool that can accelerate extraction rather than being an automatic solution.

QWhat does the author suggest might be the 'best realistic outcome' for cryptocurrency, and how does it differ from initial aspirations?

AThe author suggests the best realistic outcome for cryptocurrency may be akin to IBM's historical role: dominating at the enterprise infrastructure level (e.g., settlement rails, institutional clearing, cross-border systems) that others build upon, rather than creating consumer-facing 'super apps' or 'everything apps.' This would be a significant achievement, but it's fundamentally different from the original dream of building mass-market, indispensable products that create user 'couch lock.'

Related Reads

Farewell to Traditional Bull and Bear Markets, Deciphering the Logic of Today's Bubble Rotation

"Farewell to Traditional Bulls and Bears: Understanding Today's Market Logic of Bubble Rotation" The article draws a parallel between modern financial markets and a meteorological chain of thunderstorms, contrasting it with the past's slower-moving, more predictable 'layered cloud' systems of long bull/bear cycles and gradual sector rotations. The author argues that today's market has undergone a permanent structural shift, creating an environment where discrete, intense thematic bubbles (e.g., AI, GLP-1 drugs, crypto, robotics, quantum tech) sequentially form, swell, and burst. These 'storm cells' are triggered when capital fleeing a dying bubble acts like a meteorological 'cold air wedge,' forcing the warm, moist capital of latent interest in a new sector to rapidly rise and condense into the next speculative frenzy. This new 'convective' market regime is driven by eight fundamental changes: 1. Democratization of speculation via zero-commission trading, gamified apps, and heavy retail participation in instruments like 0DTE options. 2. Permanent, price-insensitive buying pressure from defined-contribution retirement plans (e.g., 401(k)s). 3. Passive investing creating inelastic market participants that amplify momentum, especially into mega-cap stocks. 4. The dominance of multi-strategy funds and high-frequency trading (HFT), weakening price discovery and creating fragile microstructure prone to synchronized sell-offs. 5. Artificially suppressed volatility that eventually erupts in violent spikes. 6. A transformed market index heavily weighted toward long-duration, narrative-driven tech companies instead of stable, cyclical industrials. 7. The total elimination of information delay, accelerating fear-of-missing-out (FOMO) and herd behavior. 8. A persistently loose fiscal and monetary policy environment. These structural shifts are deemed irreversible. The article outlines the common lifecycle of these thematic bubbles: latency, catalyzing event, narrative formation, peak divergence, and rupture—with outflowing capital seeding the next bubble. In this environment, two investor archetypes can thrive: deep domain experts who understand underlying technologies and business models, and disciplined trend-followers. The author concludes that while emotionally challenging, recognizing this new "climate" is crucial. The key is to elevate one's perspective above the immediate storm to see the cyclical chain of bubbles, avoiding being swept away by the emotions of any single thematic frenzy.

Foresight News19m ago

Farewell to Traditional Bull and Bear Markets, Deciphering the Logic of Today's Bubble Rotation

Foresight News19m ago

Michael Saylor's Latest Article: Bitcoin Must Find Balance Between Uniqueness and Universal Value

Michael Saylor outlines four key Bitcoin ideologies shaping its future: * **Bitcoin Maximalists** see Bitcoin as the dominant digital monetary network and a breakthrough in economic empowerment, emphasizing its superior property rights and role as a sound money solution. * **Bitcoin Capitalists** focus on integration, believing Bitcoin must embed into the global economy—through institutions, capital markets, and financial products—to reach its full potential as digital capital. * **Bitcoin Technologists** advocate for continuous protocol improvements in scalability, privacy, and security to adapt to evolving needs and threats, while acknowledging the high bar for change. * **Bitcoin Fundamentalists** guard Bitcoin's core principles of self-custody, decentralization, and censorship resistance, warning against dilution from institutions or risky modifications. Saylor argues that a healthy Bitcoin ecosystem requires a balance of these perspectives. Bitcoin's path forward involves disciplined expansion: preserving its immutable core (Fundamentalist insight), recognizing its dominant status (Maximalist view), integrating with the global economy (Capitalist drive), and enabling careful innovation, primarily in higher layers (Technologist role). The challenge is to maintain Bitcoin's unique properties while making it useful for the world, ensuring it remains Bitcoin as it grows.

Foresight News51m ago

Michael Saylor's Latest Article: Bitcoin Must Find Balance Between Uniqueness and Universal Value

Foresight News51m ago

Reddit Weekly Hot Stock Watch: RKLB/LUNR/ASTS Plunge Collectively, Is the Space Sector Still Worth Considering?

Reddit's stock communities witnessed a concentrated surge in discussion around space stocks last week, with SPCE, RKLB, LUNR, and ASTS leading the chatter. This often signals an underlying catalyst for investor attention. However, despite being grouped as "space plays," these companies have vastly different fundamentals and recent performances. While SPCE (Virgin Galactic) saw a 22% single-day surge—potentially fueled by short covering and fallout from Blue Origin's rocket test anomaly—the other three stocks declined sharply. RKLB dropped 15%, LUNR fell 13%, and ASTS was down 7%. This divergence highlights they are not a monolithic sector. The downturn for RKLB, LUNR, and ASTS stemmed from multiple headwinds converging: Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket explosion (directly impacting ASTS's launch plans), anticipation of SpaceX's massive IPO drawing funds away from these "alternative" public space stocks, and insider selling at RKLB after significant rallies. A closer look reveals key differences: RKLB stands out with substantial, growing revenue ($113.9M in Q1) and a $2.2B backlog, though its high valuation (~80x Forward P/S) prices in success for its upcoming Neutron rocket. LUNR's reported revenue growth is largely acquisition-driven, with its core moon landing business facing a crucial test with the upcoming IM-3 mission. ASTS has a large potential market in space-based cellular connectivity but faces significant execution risk, especially after the Blue Origin launch setback. SPCE, despite high discussion volume, has minimal revenue and its recent spike appears driven more by sentiment than fundamentals. The analysis suggests it's premature to call a "buying opportunity" for the sector broadly. RKLB is considered the most fundamentally sound but may be more attractive at a lower price point ($96-$102). For the others, investors are advised to wait for specific catalysts: LUNR's IM-3 mission outcome, clarity on ASTS's revised launch timeline, and for SPCE, to avoid the speculative frenzy. The long-term space thesis remains, but short-term valuations have run ahead of fundamentals for most names.

marsbit1h ago

Reddit Weekly Hot Stock Watch: RKLB/LUNR/ASTS Plunge Collectively, Is the Space Sector Still Worth Considering?

marsbit1h ago

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片