Honestly, the biggest problem with using multi-chain wallets for a long time isn't "not knowing how to use them," but asset fragmentation that messes with your mindset: some chains have a little gas left, others have NFTs, and there are small tokens scattered across different addresses, and in the end, you forget why you transferred them in the first place... My current approach is pretty simple: the main address only does two things (long-term holdings + receiving payments), other chains are used as "temporary addresses" as workspaces, and once done, I delete them. If I can bridge back to the main chain, I do so; don’t let balances float around everywhere. Also, I do a weekly reconciliation, directly pull transaction records + check mempool congestion, and conveniently revoke unnecessary authorizations to prevent issues later and not lose track of the source. Recently, I’ve seen more interpretations that tightly link ETF fund flows, US stock risk appetite, and crypto prices, but I think no matter how hot the external narrative gets, it’s useless—don’t mess up your own wallet first... I’m not sure if this is the optimal solution, but at least it doesn’t feel like opening my wallet every day is like rummaging through a trash can.

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