Actually, everyone understands that a collapse in blockchain game pools isn't necessarily due to "lack of traffic"; more often, it's inflation and output treating the pool as an ATM: fixed token emissions every day, while demand is random, ultimately turning selling pressure into a paper depth. A few days ago, I even did a small experiment, using a small account to enter and exit the same pool three times; changing the route and slippage immediately affected the results, and the "whales" even liked to target times when "the output just arrived and was sold" to manipulate... In simple terms, the thinner the pool and the more mechanical the output, the easier it is to be played into a negative feedback loop. By the way, I want to complain that now on-chain, whenever there's a large transfer or a transaction involving hot and cold wallets on exchanges, someone always shouts "smart money is here," but in this inflationary structure, smart money might just be here to harvest slippage and exit liquidity. Don't get too caught up in it; I'll just watch the pool depth and selling rhythm first.

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