Today’s rain is as jittery as network fluctuations; as soon as I stepped out, I was stuck in traffic. I casually checked the “on-chain data,” and the more I looked, the more I felt something was off: the same transaction showed as not yet arrived on Website A, but it had already been confirmed multiple times on B… It wasn’t until later that I realized that often what you see as “on-chain” is actually RPC/node queuing, slow indexing, or even a service cache that hasn’t been refreshed. In plain terms, it’s delayed, not that the chain has truly stopped.



Now before cross-chain transfers, I open two additional interfaces to verify, and I don’t rely on just one page for balance/nonce/confirmation count. Otherwise, if liquidity dries up, you might think you haven’t received the funds, and your mood will instantly collapse. Recently, we’ve been discussing tax increases and tightening or loosening compliance, which changes deposit and withdrawal expectations. Everyone is rushing around more, resulting in more congested nodes and higher, more annoying fees… Anyway, I’ll slow down first, prefer to wait a bit longer for confirmation, rather than making wrong decisions based on “data delays.”
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