Stop. Stop—don’t rush in yet.



There are plenty of GitHub stars, the audit report is pinned right to the homepage, and the multisig upgrades are written up beautifully—but it’s no longer true that “having it” automatically means “it’s safe.” Spend five minutes clicking in and taking a look; it’s better than reading a hundred KOLs’ “technical narrative” hype.

GitHub: check whether there have been commits in the past few days—are they still actively working, or just goofing off? Audit report: flip to the “Known Issues” page and see what risks they admit, especially the ones they call “minor,” because sometimes those are exactly the vulnerabilities. Multisig upgrade: don’t just look at how many signers there are—look at who is signing; whether the emergency pause permission is properly restricted; and how long the time lock lasts.

Lately, staking unlocks and unlock calendars have been everywhere. When the overall market softens, everyone starts getting anxious and selling. Put plainly: for the project you’re watching, is there a corresponding liquidity exit route behind the unlock calendar? If there isn’t, then the GitHub link is probably there to shuffle liquidity and generate traffic.

Stop refreshing those flashy charts, and stop reading posts like “XX project is preparing to take off.” First learn how to spot the illusion of “trust,” and then talk about other things. Anyway, I don’t believe in “perpetual consensus” anymore—I only trust paths and liquidity.
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