Recently earning testnet points feels a bit like working out; clearly it's practice, but as you go on, it starts to feel like "return." Once people have expectations, their hands tend to get unclean: the more time they lose, the more they want to make up for it, and the more they try to make up for it, the more addictive it becomes. My stop-loss is pretty simple—I set a limit for myself: how long I can tinker in a day, how many accounts I can switch, how many signatures I can make. When I reach that limit, I stop, regardless of whether the group is accelerating or how tempting the leaderboard looks. Honestly, points aren’t assets; they’re emotional amplifiers.



Another point is, recently those on-chain data tools and tagging systems have been criticized for being laggy or misleading. I also feel the same: don’t take “certain address = certain team” as a definitive conclusion. Just look at the path; don’t rush to find evidence for the story. What you can do is clearly write down the costs: time + gas + attention. If it exceeds that, just treat it as paying tuition—don’t force it into an investment logic.

What about you?
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