Monero brings a very unique, but important aspect to the crypto community. Many people take their privacy seriously, and anonymity is a very large prospect for users.
In a world where digital information is becoming the norm, there needs to be a secure and private way to relay information while protecting the identity of the individuals involved.
Monero has made its position within the crypto network and will continue to grow (and hopefully be become more adopted) in the future.
Monero is different in the sense that every transaction is private. Monero hides the sender, amount, transaction broadcast, and receiver with ring signatures, RingCT, Kovri, and stealth addresses, respectively.
By default, every transaction on the Monero blockchain untraceable and unable to be linked to any user.
However, you can provide a certain key to someone to let them understand what is happening.
Coins such as Bitcoin (BTC), TRON, or Litecoin, have transparent systems in which merchants or individuals would hope the funds weren’t used for illicit reasons especially if they are using privacy features to hide information.
With Monero, merchants and users of the coin can receive these funds without fearing the source of the funds. Merchants also don’t want or need their vendors known and individually don’t want everyone to know how much they are spending.