Lately I've been looking at several blockchain game pools, and the more I look, the more it feels like a familiar pattern: the initial output is aggressive, the early participants also come in strongly, but after a few days, inflation becomes unsustainable, token prices soften, and what's left in the pool is an accelerating wave of sell pressure... To put it simply, it's not that there are "no users," but that the line of "output > consumption" has never been properly calculated. When gas fees spike and transaction batching gets chaotic, everyone rushes to withdraw, making the on-chain situation even worse.



Recently, AI Agents and automated trading have become popular again. They can make interactions very active, but being active doesn't mean healthy. Some are just squeezing inflation even more cleanly; on the other hand, no one seems to care much about security. When issues arise with authorization, contract upgrades, or dividend logic, the pool collapses faster than inflation. Now, when I see high output, my first reaction isn't "go all in," but to look at the consumption scenarios and exit costs. If those aren't there, I treat it like a smoke alarm going off. What about you?
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