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I just reviewed the failed swap from last night, and honestly, it was my own fault: I thought the routing looked smooth, but I set the slippage too tight, and then the pool depth was insufficient. During the jump, the price was pushed a bit and it immediately reverted. Even dumber, I confirmed in two steps, dragging out the process and giving others a chance to cut in line (or maybe it was just congestion in the same pool, but the result is the same). My current approach is to first check how much depth each jump actually consumes; if it's not enough, I’d rather split the order or change the route, and not cut the slippage all at once. My roommate is still nearby complaining, “You spend so much time researching trading routes, and in the end, you lose because you clicked the button too slowly”… I can't help but laugh. Recently, I heard that some regions are tightening and relaxing regulations on taxes and compliance at different times, causing deposit and withdrawal expectations to fluctuate. On-chain, there are obviously more urgent orders to execute, and the more urgent they are, the easier it is to fall into a slippage trap. That’s all for now, I’ll check again tomorrow.