Actually, everyone understands that the biggest fear of cross-chain bridges isn't clicking the wrong button, but the keys behind them, the price feeds, and your anxious mindset of wanting "funds to arrive" quickly.


In the past, I also rushed; when I saw the page prompt, I would move to the next step almost immediately, but then I’d get stuck at "waiting for confirmation" and become more impatient, starting to click randomly...
Later, I set a rule for myself: as long as it involves a bridge, I’d rather wait for two more confirmation rounds than let my emotions push me into making revenge trades.
Multi-signature sounds stable, but it actually depends on whether the signers are too centralized; the same goes for oracles—fewer data sources are like listening to just one person speak.
Recently, RWA, U.S. Treasury yields, and on-chain yield products have been compared side by side, but I’ve become more cautious: the yields look "stable," but the channels and intermediate steps are unstable, and the same can lead to a crash.
Take a sip of water first, slow down a bit, it really saves trouble.
RWA0.13%
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