I am increasingly convinced that once assets grow in volume, relying solely on "remembering mnemonic phrases" as some kind of mystical trick is no longer enough. Hardware wallets are suitable for those who mainly do things manually and infrequently; at least, your hands shouldn't shake. Multi-signature wallets are more like binding yourself to rules; the more money you have, the more secure it feels, but the setup and daily operations are really troublesome, and lazy people are prone to mistakes. Social recovery sounds gentle, but you really need to think carefully about whether the "friends/devices" you're relying on are trustworthy; otherwise, losing once might be enough for you to get burned.



Recently, Meme coins and celebrity shoutouts have caused another wave of attention shifts. When new faces in the group get excited, they all jump in blindly. I can't help but chime in: don't take the last baton, especially don't use temporary enthusiasm to challenge long-term security.

What I fear most isn't slowness, but chaos—it's okay to confirm transactions more slowly, transfer more slowly. But if permissions get mixed up, backups get messed up, signature paths get tangled, I really don't want to experience that "watching everything disappear in front of your eyes" liquidation waterfall again.
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