Lately, I've been looking at those "coincidental transfers" on the blockchain, and the more I watch, the less mystical it seems—it's just that the paths aren't broken down. By combining timestamps, nonces, the same batch of gas parameters, and looping through contract calls back and forth, many addresses that look random are actually scripts doing bucketing and recycling, or even landing accounts for cross-chain messages acting as buffers.



A few days ago, the bridge had another issue, and a bunch of people in the group were shouting "wait for confirmation," I understand... The oracle error that time left people traumatized. Honestly, on-chain transactions aren't unexplainable; you just have to be willing to see a transaction as a series of small actions, otherwise it just looks like "coincidence."

By the way, a quick rant about my partner: I get anxious when I can't match the nonce, and he just says "try restarting"... Fine, I can't restart the blockchain, but my script has been saved by a restart before. That's all for now.
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