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Many people evaluate an infrastructure project solely based on funding scale and technical indicators, actually overlooking the most core dimension—the quality of patient capital.
It's not about how much money there is, but about who is willing to invest time during the long cold start period, rather than just seeking quick arbitrage.
The participants currently attracted to the APRO project are becoming increasingly interesting. They are not the most aggressive short-term traders, nor purely emotional speculators, but a group of people who care more about "whether this system can exist long-term." This is indeed uncommon in the crypto market.
Most projects are driven by emotion, attracting funds seeking quick gains. True infrastructure projects, on the other hand, ultimately attract those willing to stay with it through the entire cold start phase. APRO is now actively screening such participants through rhythm—not by setting thresholds, but by allowing those accustomed to short cycles and seeking strong stimulation to naturally leave.
If you expect quick feedback and frequent fluctuations, this type of project will definitely test your patience; but if you value structural integrity, disciplined execution, and long-term usability, you might find it worth continuing to observe.
The true moat of infrastructure is not just the technology itself, but the group of participants willing to stay through the entire cold start phase. The most consuming aspect of cold start is not resources, but patience—limited call volume, subtle feedback, low discussion activity, yet the system operates steadily every day. This state is fundamentally against human nature because you invest time but see no immediate returns. APRO is currently experiencing this phase. If a infrastructure project can maintain this discipline during the cold start, its subsequent resilience will far exceed expectations.