Right now, when I’m running on-chain, I basically have two approaches: everyday interactions, and transfers back and forth like that. If I can do it on L2, then I’ll do it on L2—less hassle, less gas, and the experience is a bit smoother too. If I really need to move large amounts or do critical operations (for example, changing addresses, permissions, or doing things like signatures), then I’ll still go back to the mainnet. It’s more expensive, but at least I feel at ease—I worry less about the kind of “weird stuff going wrong on the bridge.”



Recently, the unlock calendar has been dug up again and it’s pretty scary. Basically, once emotions kick in, gas starts causing trouble too. My compromise is kind of crude: on the mainnet, I pick a time with fewer people in advance and get the required work done; on L2, I leave it as a “flexible buffer.” When extreme volatility comes, I just place a few pullback orders in places where everyone else is too afraid to place theirs—it feels pretty satisfying. If it doesn’t work out, then it’s just me paying tuition. In any case, don’t cram all your actions onto the same chain at the same time.
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