Multi-chain wallets can really easily confuse people: today depositing some collateral on Chain A, tomorrow jumping to Chain B for an airdrop, in a couple of weeks forgetting which funds are for what... My current somewhat old-fashioned method is to categorize by "purpose" rather than by "chain": the main wallet only holds long-term and collateralized assets, trading/testing new protocols goes into a separate one, and a small account for pure testing, keeping them separate. Then I also keep a table to record three things: which chain it’s on, which contract it’s linked to, and the liquidation/expiration point (not tracking this is like missing teeth in a gear, eventually it will bite back). Recently, everyone’s been talking about staking unlocks, unlock calendars, and the anxiety of sell pressure, so I also put positions that might need to be withdrawn on chains that are easier to exit from, so that when bridges are congested or gas fees spike, I won’t be left helpless. Anyway, I don’t aim to make a lot of profit, just don’t let your management fall apart.

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