These days, I've been watching the packing rhythm, and the more I look at it, the more I feel that on-chain "cutting in line" isn't just about making a little more profit. The ones most affected are often the most ordinary: small users swapping coins with default slippage, people confirming transactions through the front end, and in the end, when the transaction price gets squeezed, they think it's just slow network. Actually, once the order changes, the sense of fairness disappears, and the experience feels like "I clearly clicked first."



In the group, people are again sharing images about stablecoin regulation, reserve audits, and de-pegging rumors. When everyone's emotions rise, it's easier to click on transactions impulsively, which just creates conditions for MEV strategies... Thinking about it later, it's quite laughable— the more afraid, the more aggressive, and the more aggressive, the more you're being exploited.

Right now, I feel pretty timid: when I see gas suddenly spike and similar transactions pile up in the block, I stop for a moment, rather miss out than become someone else's sandwich cookie. Anyway, there's no "queue number" on-chain—only who knows how to push more money and who understands the rhythm better.
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