Lately, I've been watching the pools in blockchain games, and it’s a bit like looking at a beautiful geometric diagram that gradually stretches out and finally collapses into a mess. Basically, it’s because inflation is too smooth and the output is too frequent: releasing a bunch of tokens daily to pile up "revenue," but the real consumption scenarios can't keep up, and selling pressure keeps rising like water levels, eventually drowning the pool itself. Players aren’t fools either; seeing that output exceeds consumption quickly, their first reaction is to "withdraw some as backup," myself included, leaving some redundancy to feel secure, otherwise if the game stops or adjusts suddenly, everything would be exposed. Coincidentally, the main public chain is about to upgrade and maintain these days, and the group is guessing whether projects will migrate... I think it doesn’t matter whether they migrate or not; if the economic model only produces without brakes, switching chains is just moving the leak somewhere else. For now, let’s keep observing whether it can make consumption as stable as the structure.

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