Lately, people keep talking about "modularization." To put it simply, the most intuitive change for us end users isn't that the concept is impressive, but that the interaction paths have become longer: bridging back and forth, wallets needing to switch across multiple chains, Gas fees sometimes ridiculously cheap and other times so high they make you want to smash your phone. It’s like building with blocks or unpacking a delivery—more parts, more choices, but also more points of failure, especially if you're not careful, you might trigger a witch rule or lose track of your funds.



Additionally, everyone complains about validator/miner earnings, MEV, and unfair ordering, and I can relate a bit... Clearly, I just want to perform an interaction, but my transaction gets sandwiched or queued forever, making the experience feel like "you're using it, but you don’t control it." Anyway, my current approach is still conservative: minimize permissions, split into small amounts, check on-chain records more often—survive first, then talk about surprises.
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