Honestly, when I’ve been looking at those yield aggregators recently, the APY they advertise looks pretty tempting—but the higher it is, the more suspicious I feel. When I’m watching gas, I always start by checking the interaction frequency of the underlying contracts. The signals are abnormal gas-fee swings, or strange permissions hidden in the contract code—like permissions that let someone change strategies at any time. Put simply, behind the yield is a bet against the counterparty: once the contract gets swapped, the money just disappears. The same logic applies to chain games—once the economic model breaks, gas will move first, and the traces of a studio’s dumping are just too obvious on-chain. In any case, I don’t believe any “guaranteed profit” promises. It’s better to write my own script to track where the funds are flowing so I can feel at ease.

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