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You said, "Should retail investors study blockchain builders, bundle them into scripts?" I really don't think it's necessary... To be honest, knowing three things is enough: First, the "transaction price" you see may not be the world at the moment you click confirm; second, your swap might be bundled into someone else's convoy and taken along (or it might be squeezed out); third, don't blindly trust certain wallet buttons that say "protect you," many prompts are just placebo. When it comes to on-chain games with inflation + studios + coin price spirals collapsing, it's even more obvious: the blockchain is actually very "honest," it's just that the interactions hide the risks too well. Anyway, I'm now more concerned about whether permission pop-ups and rollback failures are written clearly, so I don't accidentally click the wrong thing.