Recently, I saw everyone focusing on a major mainstream public chain upgrade/maintenance, and the group was guessing whether the "ecosystem will move."


I think, for ordinary users, the most intuitive change in modular chains isn't that the concept sounds cooler, but whether the confirmation process is smooth: no more frequent lagging, unpredictable transaction fees, or having to copy addresses for bridges.

In simple terms, after splitting "execution/data/consensus," many projects can upgrade their underlying infrastructure faster; whether they migrate or not might be more like changing servers rather than changing the world.
But there's a cost: you need to get used to multiple chains, multiple bridges, and various wallet prompts...
Right now, I can only treat it as practice for trading psychology. When I see new chain airdrop narratives, I get itchy to act, but I remind myself first: slow down, see how the funds come back, and don’t rush to blame the market if I get caught in a trap—blame myself for not holding back.
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