I'm not very good at explaining those very low-level fundamentals, but for blockchain builders and bundles, retail investors just need to know what's "enough": the transaction you send may not be included in the block at the exact moment you click the button, it might be bundled together with others and inserted as a chunk, with the order of who came first, whether someone snatched a quick profit (in plain terms, being front-run or sandwich attacked). So my bottom line now is: don't give unlimited approvals randomly, don't go all-in on pools with low liquidity, don't set too high slippage, and if you encounter strange transactions, assume you're playing against "people who queue better." Recently, AI agents' automatic interactions have been hyped up quite a bit, but I'm more concerned whether they help you cut corners on security details... Anyway, once the task is done, I leave; when on-chain thresholds are met, I withdraw—no need to fight over it.

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