These days, as soon as liquidity is pulled out, the market looks like a second-hand group with no buyers... I actually don’t dare to get “addicted to bottom fishing” anymore. To put it simply, survive first: reduce positions, withdraw when possible, I will still go through bridges and new chains but only with trial and error funds, keep traces of addresses, save interaction screenshots, so I won’t mismatch accounts later or get phished.



The recent criticism of the “compound interest” approach of re-staking and shared security is understandable, I can see why it’s being called a scam, as cash flow tightening easily exposes the flaws. Anyway, I now prioritize whether I can exit at any time, whether the contract has risk controls, don’t get too attached to high yields, leave some room to survive, and wait until the market provides liquidity before considering bottom fishing.
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