YieldGoblin

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Recently, people keep asking me whether you need to dig into blockchain builders and bundles to the point of “being able to write code.” To put it plainly, retail investors only need to know three things: 1) The transactions you send may not get included in blocks in the order you see—someone will bundle them and can even cut in line; 2) When you do large on-chain token swaps or liquidate positions at the margin, slippage and failure fees are not just “bad luck”—it could be because you’re being watched; 3) Don’t click random unfamiliar routes just to save a couple cents of gas. Keep protection
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Recently, I’ve seen more people on the blockchain watching big transfers and unusual activity in exchanges’ hot and cold wallets—then shouting, “Smart money is here.” My first reaction isn’t whether to follow or not. It’s: if I were the one who did this, why would I be able to remember it clearly by the end of the year… Anyway, every time I rebalance positions / mine / claim an airdrop, I conveniently throw into the same folder the transaction history exported from the exchange, the on-chain tx hash, and the screenshots from the time (especially those involving cross-chain transfers and swappi
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My current attitude towards testnet points is: if I can earn it, I will, but once I start "waiting for it to give me a return," I treat it as a position and set stop-losses when needed... To be honest, practice can be casual, but expectations can be deadly.
My exit conditions are pretty simple: no more than a certain amount of time spent each day, no more than a certain number of new contracts authorized, no more than a few transactions sent to one address (even if it's small, it's still money). If I exceed these, I stop. When I see the group watching large transfers on the chain or abnormal m
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