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Recently, I've seen people talk about cross-chain bridge thefts again, and honestly, it's the same old advice: don't be overly superstitious about things that "look usable."
By the way, it also reminds me of oracle price feeds—if you're not paying attention normally, a real problem can be deadly.
Once the price feed is delayed, your position is basically like driving in fog: the on-chain price hasn't kept up with the market, the collateralization ratio might look okay, but the next update could suddenly push it right to liquidation level, leaving no time to "add some margin."
What's even worse are those abnormal quotes—people now love to shout "wait for confirmation," but liquidation bots don't wait for your consensus; they follow the rules, cold and emotionless.
As a dust collector myself, I used to love picking up floor-priced assets, but lately I've become more cautious: leverage, if it can be avoided, should be avoided; cross-chain transfers, if they can be minimized, should be minimized—better to go slow...
After all, turning things around depends on luck, and staying alive depends on caution.