Recently, I've been looking at various "interaction guides," and the more I read, the more it feels like free testing for project teams... Airdrops, to put it simply, are like a lottery ticket, and they might also be anti-rug coupons. My approach is: only interact with protocols I genuinely use, and if I can do it in one go, I won't repeat the process. I also categorize my wallets, and I don't use my main wallet for testing, to avoid accidentally granting permissions I didn't notice one day.



The staking unlocks and token unlock calendar have been brought up again recently and are quite alarming, but that's normal—everyone fears a sell-off pressure. But the more these situations happen, the easier it is to FOMO into "adding interactions." Forget it, to put it plainly: don't buy into the risk just for a possible airdrop. If you really want to participate, set a limit. Treat the interaction as paying for an experience; if you get something, it's a win, if not, just pretend it didn't happen.
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