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Lately, I've been a bit annoyed by the liquidity pools in chain games: honestly, it's just like "production" and releasing water—short-term data looks good, but in the long run, it drains you completely. When inflation is high, everyone becomes a bookkeeping machine; no one is really playing anymore, they're just selling tokens to the next person... What these pools truly need are "consumption scenarios," otherwise no matter how sophisticated the token model is, it's just delaying the collapse.
These days, I see a lot of narratives about AI Agents + automated trading + on-chain interactions. It's lively, but I'm more concerned about whether these automation scripts are actually helping people save effort or just helping them drain the pool faster. No one really wants to talk about security.
Last night, I even set reminders/limits for myself, thinking I’d feel freer, but my first reaction was a bit annoyed: how come I don’t even trust myself... but after a while, I relaxed again, at least I won’t accidentally increase my position just because of a "profit screen." Anyway, it's okay to go slow; when the pool collapses, no one asks how fast you run away.