This round, someone asked me again, "How to interact without getting anti-sniped and still snag an airdrop"… Basically, don’t treat yourself as the project’s favorite child; the risk control team sees you as a sheep. My approach is pretty boring: only use your regular wallet for natural actions, not those fake diligent dozens-of-transactions-per-day; before each interaction, calculate gas, slippage, and approval scope clearly—preferably do fewer transactions rather than gamble on "more transactions mean more shares." And for those that require you to authorize unlimited limits before proceeding to the second step, I usually just close the page to avoid being chased down for liquidation or having my approvals revoked later.



FOMO isn’t entirely bad, but don’t get so caught up that you treat the main chain like a lottery machine. If you want to participate, set a cap: time limit, fee limit, psychological limit—when reached, stop. Anyway, the market never rewards overconfidence. Recently, the NFT royalty disputes also seem pretty similar: one side says creators need income, the other says secondary markets need liquidity, and in the end, the ones paying the bill are usually the traders… So I care more about how the rules are written, who can change them, and whether I’m the last passive target getting hit.

What I’ve learned isn’t tricks, but this: treat “potential airdrops” as freebies, not as wages.
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