Merchants need to collect payments, employees need to be paid, do you really want to set up a Paymaster for every project again?
Recently, Azu helped a friend look at a 'multi-collection wallet' solution: it needs to support USDT payments, be gas-free, and ideally have some privacy. After several rounds of discussions, it turned out that all chains were stuck on one phrase — 'These features can be done, but you have to do it yourself: find a third-party Paymaster, set up gas routing yourself, and then add a privacy component.' Every wallet and every dApp is reinventing the same wheel, falling into the same pitfalls.
Plasma's clever operation is very anti-Web3 inertia: the three-piece set related to stablecoins — zero-fee USD₮ transfers, customizable gas tokens, and confidential payments — is not left to the ecosystem to 'show their talents', but is written as a standard contract for protocol operation, directly hanging below the execution layer, maintained by the official team. These contracts still use standard Solidity, fully compatible with the EVM toolchain, so you can still use Hardhat, Foundry, and MetaMask, with the calling object changing from 'third-party service providers' to 'the chain's own modules'.
The purpose of Stablecoin-Native Contracts is to provide developers with out-of-the-box 'zero-fee, stablecoin gas payment, and confidentiality' capabilities, without needing to fork infrastructure, change wallets, or rewrite half of the middleware. In reality, if you want to create a multi-collection merchant wallet, an anonymous payroll system, or a B2B settlement platform, in the past you had to negotiate with a bunch of suppliers and sign a pile of integrations, but now you can directly connect to Plasma's protocol contracts, saving not just a day or two of development time, but an entire layer of systemic friction.
Simply put: stop starting every project from 'how to fill in basic capabilities'. On this chain of Plasma, the business of stablecoins finally starts from 'writing business logic' rather than 'filling in infrastructure'.

