ByteSizedAlpha

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Just now, I placed an order and got "snatched" again, which shook my confidence a bit... Later, I thought about it, retail investors don't actually need to research block builders and bundles to the level of academic papers. You just need to know: the transaction you send may not go directly into a block; it could be packaged and sorted in between. Whoever offers a more attractive "packaging fee" gets ahead; the result is slippage, execution price, or even being squeezed out without moving at all. For me, there are three practical points: don't set too tight a slippage; split large orders into
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This anti-burn mechanism is quite on point; get on board first, then discuss the benefits.
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CarpenterLabs
Currently on BSC, it's not projects that are lacking, but "resilience."
Passing by BSC, I saw that Thor has been quite popular recently, so I took a close look at the documentation. This "anti-burn design" is quite practical: holding more than 500k tokens grants full-level defense directly, or you can use tiered protection. In short, it doesn't give opportunities to those who just want to make a quick profit without effort.
This logic of "having a position first, then discussing returns" makes the current 2M market cap seem especially substantial. It's not built on hype, but on this anti-burn mechanism that firmly establishes consensus.
Goal: Make BSC Great Again. No rush, no impatience, wait for the wind.
Perhaps those who truly want to "Make BSC Great Again" are not in a hurry for a quick surge right now. Listen to this thunder, it's not harsh, even a bit steady.
The Thunder God has now set sail. If you're tired of quick in-and-out gambling, maybe you can listen to this thunder. ⛈
CA: 0x7488ae896e232de4f69da856ec8d7ec4aa8bffff
#DYOR
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LST, re-staking—put simply, the returns aren’t conjured out of thin air: part of it is the consensus rewards from native staking, and the other part is renting out the same “security” to more services to earn subsidies or fees. The subsidy period looks pretty appealing, but down the road it will most likely turn into a competition to undercut prices; in the end, you’ll be left with what real demand is willing to pay.
The risks are also pretty straightforward: on the on-chain layer, it’s about penalties and nodes making trouble; on the protocol layer, it’s a chain reaction created by contracts,
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