By bamfy on Skatehive
As I read the update on LeoKit launched, my first honest reaction was "this is for builders". APIs, dashboards, cross-chain swaps, integrations in minutes... is the kind of update that makes developers sit up straight and start sketching new products. If I were a Web3 developer, I’d probably already be spinning up a dApp, plugging into LeoKit, and thinking through how to monetize cross-chain swaps inside a wallet or interface. But truth is I’m not a developer, at least for now. That doesn’t mean the LeoKit launch is not relevant to me. In fact, it might be even more relevant. As a user, community member, and long-term believer in the LEO ecosystem, I see LeoKit as something bigger than just another product release. I see it as infrastructure that tends to change the LEO demand dynamics in powerful ways. LeoKit turns cross-chain swapping into a plug-and-play service. Any wallet, app, or interface can integrate it, set their own fees, and start earning immediately. That lowers the barrie