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Decentralized storage sounds great, but do nodes intentionally go offline, and will data be lost? This question has troubled many who want to get involved. I decided to test it myself.
I took a 2GB blockchain game map file and directly uploaded it to Walrus. Then the most intense part came—I forcibly shut down 60% of the nodes in the storage network to simulate the worst-case scenario. Then I tried to retrieve the file.
Result? The data was fully restored within 8 minutes, with a 100% recovery success rate. No damage at all.
How is this possible? The key lies in RedStuff 2D erasure coding. Simply put, your file is divided into N+M fragments. Even if M fragments are lost, the algorithm can reconstruct the complete file. This is completely different from traditional copying and backup methods, and it’s much more efficient.
To compare, similar storage solutions typically handle about 30% node failures, but Walrus doubles that. For projects storing large files on-chain—games, videos, and so on—this means data permanence is basically guaranteed. No more worries about losing stored data suddenly.