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Recently, people have been talking about modular blockchains. To put it simply, the biggest changes for end users might be twofold: first, transactions are less "laggy," and fees are more acceptable to normal people; second, the steps for wallets and cross-chain transfers are more fragmented, but the experience hasn't actually become simpler... You see the same NFT, listing, selling, bridging back and forth, with the floor price and liquidity split into different places, which makes it even more dependent on whether the community is truly willing to take on the risk.
And then there are those opinions that interpret ETF capital flows, U.S. stock risk appetite, and crypto market rises and falls all together. I also read them, but the more I look, the more I feel: macro is just a background, what really influences our actions is still "which chain, which market, and whether there's depth."
There are many tutorials, but I prefer those that clearly explain where the money comes from, where it might get stuck, and how to exit if problems arise. Otherwise, after reading them, it’s just for peace of mind. Anyway, when I choose projects now, I pay more attention to: where they migrate to, how liquidity is managed, and whether royalties can still be maintained.