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Just now, I was running back and forth between a few chains again. Saving those few chunks of transaction fees made me laugh at myself… but the more I run, the more I realize that crossing chains is actually like pulling blind boxes from a “trust gift package.”
IBC looks pretty smooth—on the surface, it’s just two chains sending messages to each other—but in reality, you have to trust that: both sides’ chains won’t just stop operating / or do anything too outrageous with reorganizations; the light client/validation mechanism won’t be written in a way that blows up; the relay/relayer won’t get you stuck (it doesn’t custody your assets, but it can keep you waiting until your patience explodes); and that the wallet, RPC, and frontend you use won’t start messing around. If you switch to the common bridges, it gets even more intense: multi-sig, oracles, custodial contracts, operators… if any single link loosens, things could go wrong.
Lately, compliance has gotten tighter again, and taxes have been added, so my expectations for deposits and withdrawals are even more up in the air. I’m now more willing to take the “a little less trust” route—even if it’s slower. Either way, if I can save, I’ll save; if I can stay stable, I’ll stay stable. That’s it for now.