Using multi-chain wallets for a long time really can make you feel like you’ve developed split personality: there’s a bit of gas over here, a transaction stuck in pending over there, and then you’ve got a handful of scattered assets from a few L2/side chains—trying to even find a “main wallet” can take half a day. The other day, I really did get the urge to just “quit everything/uninstall, and go back to using only one chain,” but when I calmed down, it wasn’t a problem with having too many chains—it was that my management approach is just too laissez-faire…



Right now, I’m forcing myself to organize everything with a “flowchart brain”: one wallet for everyday payments/interactions (only keep enough funds in it), one wallet for positions (don’t just casually connect to dApps), and the remaining test chains are kept as separate addresses—so if something goes wrong, I don’t really mind. Then once a week, I do a fixed “consolidation”: swap those fragmented tokens into two or three commonly used ones, and for cross-chain transfers, I only take a few fixed routes; otherwise, the records simply won’t match. Lately, modularization and discussions about the DA layer have been going wild—developers are excited beyond belief—but from the user side, it’s basically one sentence: don’t make me open three pages just to make a single transfer… for now, that’s it.
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