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Right now, when I look at projects, I’m not focused on working seriously; instead, I first look at how the treasury spends money: where the funds flow, whether each transaction matches the milestones. It’s not that “expenses = reliability,” the key is whether you can see tangible results after spending, like document updates, product iterations, community proposal progress—it's okay if it's slow, just don’t be left with only posters and slogans.
Recently, someone was complaining that on-chain data tools and label systems can lag behind and might even mislead, so I’m even less willing to rely solely on a dashboard… I’ll casually click into transaction records, check what the recipient addresses are doing beforehand, just to confirm it’s not some “left hand giving to the right hand” trick.
As for avoiding impulsive orders, I set a silly rule for myself: when I want to buy, I first look up what they last wrote about their milestones, whether I can find corresponding traces on the chain, in the repository, or on the forum; if I can’t find anything, I close the trading page first, draw two tiny pixel-sized scenes to calm down, and wait half an hour before deciding. Anyway, decisions made when I’m high are usually pretty reckless.