Lately, I keep seeing a bunch of “interactions must have airdrops,” and it’s starting to wear me out… To be blunt, an airdrop is just a game of probability, not a fate handed out by destiny. My approach is pretty old-school: first, check whether there are real users actually using the chain (not a bunch of the same wallets bouncing back and forth to farm), then see whether the project team has clearly explained their “anti-bot/anti-farming” protections; if not, treat it like buying a lottery ticket—test with a small amount, and don’t turn yourself into a KPI machine.



Also, don’t get too anxious about the whole “anti-farming” thing—often it’s not that you did something wrong, but that the rules changed. What you can do is leave a paper trail: keep your interaction rhythm from looking like a script, don’t make your fund paths too single-minded or too uniform, and don’t expose your main wallet down to the last detail just to complete a few tasks. Recently, the compliance boundaries around privacy coins/mixers have been getting argued about pretty fiercely. As for me, I’m not going to risk taking those gray-area paths just to “look more like a real person,” because if risk control catches you, it could end up costing even more.

The key to not falling into FOMO might come down to just one line: it’s normal if you don’t get it, and getting it doesn’t automatically mean you’re smarter… That’s it for now.
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