Stylus is, in my opinion, @arbitrum’s real unlock for mass adoption.
Forget the talk about Rust being faster, that is only half the story. I think the real win is bringing C and C++ developers straight onto the chain.
There are huge numbers of engineers who already write high performance code in those languages. With Stylus, they do not have to start from scratch with Solidity.
They can deploy smart contracts using a stack they already know, while still plugging into Arbitrum’s EVM-compatible environment.
This shift can reshape the developer adoption curve for Arbitrum. It also gives Layer 3 and Orbit builders a more flexible, higher performance toolbox on top of Nitro.
You get EVM compatibility plus access to a massive, existing talent pool.
This seamless compatibility is key for your next project. It's time to build.
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Stylus is, in my opinion, @arbitrum’s real unlock for mass adoption.
Forget the talk about Rust being faster, that is only half the story. I think the real win is bringing C and C++ developers straight onto the chain.
There are huge numbers of engineers who already write high performance code in those languages. With Stylus, they do not have to start from scratch with Solidity.
They can deploy smart contracts using a stack they already know, while still plugging into Arbitrum’s EVM-compatible environment.
This shift can reshape the developer adoption curve for Arbitrum. It also gives Layer 3 and Orbit builders a more flexible, higher performance toolbox on top of Nitro.
You get EVM compatibility plus access to a massive, existing talent pool.
This seamless compatibility is key for your next project. It's time to build.
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