The internet began with domain names. They were our first digital identities: simple, human-readable labels that replaced IP addresses and made the web usable. Years later, ENS brought that same idea onchain. Instead of long hexadecimal wallet addresses, you could use a name like example.eth to represent your identity in Web3.
A DNS twin connects those two worlds. A DNS twin is a traditional DNS domain, like example.com or example.xyz, that has been tokenized on Doma and made usable inside ENS. It remains a fully functional Web2 domain, but it also becomes a programmable, onchain identity. In other words, your website domain can now also be your wallet name. You do not need to choose between Web2 and Web3. A DNS twin lets one name work in both.