Lately, participating in airdrop projects feels like playing a "anti-farming simulator." You think you're interacting, but actually you're paying tuition for others... I'm pretty naive now: first, check if the team has written the rules in plain language, whether the contract address is clean, avoid connecting the main wallet if possible, and if you see a signature popup on-chain that you don't understand, just close it—missed opportunities are just missed. Also, don't chase full quotas during interactions; try small amounts in several rounds. As long as you can run through the same set of operations, that's enough—don't turn yourself into a high-frequency bot just for a potential whitelist. Recently, some people keep explaining crypto price swings using ETF capital flows and US stock risk appetite. Honestly, when the public opinion heats up, I get more itchy to act, but I set a rule for myself: on days when I get emotional, I only bookmark, no interaction; wait until the next day to review. That's it for now.

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