oh i see. yeah you could do that. Thats not how I've done it in the past and haven't had any trouble but I make sure to get good shots with my screws. You can walk and climb on it. Maybe if a corner busts loose or something and gives me trouble it'd be easy enough to go through and block it in like you are saying but were holding tubs of nick nacks organizing a house not feed bags of grain.
until you catch that great sale on rice or do a ton of canning and fill a shelf with 200 canning jars full of the good stuff
each 4x8 foot shelf will hold 288 quart mason jars at 3 pounds each and that is a single layer you have room for a double layer easily
288 canning jars full of water at 3 pounds each is 864 pounds your shelf easily has space for a double layer 1728 pounds.
I may be know for going a bit above and beyond in all things I construct. if it needs to hold 300 pounds you will easily put 900 there.
when you look at wall loads , you always put a jack stud next to a king stud when framing a window or door , to transfer the load of the top plate clear to the bottom plate.
and cripple studs above the header and header resting on the jack studs
by placing blocking between the floor and shelf and each shelf that fits snug you are creating a split jack stud and you take the weight off your fasteners and place it down through the split jack studs. very minimal amount more wood to make a huge difference in weight carrying capacity.
it's all fun and games when you are stacking sleeping bags that don't weigh much , but when you start stacking flats of shotgun shells , ammo cans , or canning jars full of food your load can change very fast.