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Recently, people keep talking to me about "modular chains," and honestly, the biggest change for us regular users isn't a technological revolution, but: you might not even know which chain you're using or which layer is doing the work, but the fees, speed, and the number of scapegoats when things go wrong have all increased... In the past, if a transfer failed, you'd blame the chain; now, one card: the execution layer blames the data layer, the data layer blames the sequencer, and in the end, you blame yourself for clicking a fake link.
And that "staking unlock/token unlock calendar" daily flood of sell pressure anxiety is also amplified a bit by modularization: the same narrative can be repeatedly played across different layers and tokens. When people get nervous, they rush to switch chains, bridges, or wallets—scammers love this emotional volatility, with fake customer service and fake airdrop links popping up directly.
Anyway, I only remember two things now: minimize cross-chain transfers, minimize reckless authorizations; if you really want to tinker with new chains or layers, start with small amounts to test the waters—don’t use your whole family’s tuition as a "modular experience test." That’s all for now.