That really gave me a scare just now: I accidentally clicked one more character when copying the address, and the few minutes before on-chain confirmation had my heart pounding... Luckily, I didn't send it out in the end. It also served as a reminder that those "pools" in blockchain games look lively, but are actually more fragile: when the output is high and inflation kicks in, newcomers won't buy in, and veteran players start taking the output as wages and withdrawing it, so the pool quickly empties, leaving only those waiting for a rescue.



Recently, there's been a bunch of AI Agents and automated trading claiming to interact automatically, reinvest, and so on. Honestly, it's all hype, but no one pays attention to security details: authorization, contract upgrades, blacklists—when something goes wrong, everyone goes silent. Anyway, when I look at blockchain games now, I first check "where does the output come from, who takes it," then look for "where's the withdrawal button," and treat everything else as background noise.
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