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Lately I've been looking at cross-chain bridges again, and the more I look, the more I feel that "waiting for confirmation" isn't procrastination—it's leaving myself a backup plan. No matter how many signatures there are, people are still people; no matter how fancy the oracle, feeding the wrong data once is enough to cause trouble. A few days ago, I moved some small funds from an L2 to the mainnet, and saw the bridge prompt "12/30 confirmations," I was itching to close the page, but in the end, I still waited patiently. Anyway, losing a minute is no big deal, but rushing could land you in a trap.
It also made me think about the current on-chain data tools and tagging systems being criticized for being laggy or misleading. Actually, they share the same logic as bridges: the "conclusions" you see might all be secondhand or delayed. To put it plainly, when it comes to cross-chain transfers, I now prefer to take fewer steps—batch them, small amounts, and wait for enough confirmations. If you really want speed, just treat it as taking a risk. That's all for now.