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Today, I saw someone on the blockchain talking about “coincidental transfers” again. But when you break it down, it’s not that mysterious: first, a brand-new wallet pulls some funds out of an exchange to use as gas money; then it splits them into several parts and sends them to an intermediate address; and only afterward does it reach the target contract/market. That intermediate address looks like a “mysterious person,” but to be blunt, a lot of it is just scripts arranging the routing—either that, or the same group of people using different wallets to put an extra layer in between… or maybe it’s simply someone passing by to cover fees and nothing more.
However, the whole economic model of on-chain gaming has recently been collapsing in a pretty typical way: once inflation kicks in and the studios start up work, coin prices begin spiraling downward. And as a result, these “coincidences” on-chain are actually becoming more frequent instead—everyone’s doing brick-laying + washing routes, so it looks lively, but honestly, it’s pretty exhausting. Then as I keep watching, I get tempted to jump in again… forget it. I’ll just try with a small position for trial and error—don’t want to invite trouble for myself.