Imagine such a nightmare scenario—you're diligently replenishing collateral and repaying debt on a major public chain, watching transaction confirmations, thinking you've finally escaped danger. Suddenly, the chain experiences a sudden reorganization with 10 blocks deep, and your repayment operation instantly turns into a "orphaned block." Funds are returned along the original route, but the debt record still remains there. The most terrifying part is that during this few seconds of "time rewind," the liquidation bot preemptively snatched your position on the new chain. Clearly, you've repaid the money, but you're still liquidated.
This is not alarmist talk. Although such extreme cases rarely occur in actual networks, they are technically possible. Especially for operations like lending that are extremely sensitive to account status, reorganization risks can be fatal.
**The core issue lies in the confirmation discipline of finality.**
Many people see "transaction successful" and immediately relax—that is the most dangerous trading habit. On the blockchain, "success" is just the beginning; true security requires time for confirmation. The specific approach is simple but crucial:
1. Do not operate within seconds. After completing critical operations like repayment or collateral replenishment, do not rush to broadcast or leave. Give the chain some time to respond.
2. Wait for sufficient block confirmations. At least see 15 to 20 subsequent blocks being added (which takes about 1 minute on some major public chains). Only when the block explorer shows your transaction has been "deeply buried" under enough new blocks is it truly settled.
3. Double-check without hassle. During the waiting period, actively refresh the lending protocol data to confirm that the debt shows as repaid and the account shows the collateral replenished. Seeing is believing.
Blockchain gives us financial autonomy, but it also places more complex risk management responsibilities on us. Mastering confirmation discipline is the strongest defense against such extreme scenarios.
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RugPullAlertBot
· 01-14 23:56
This wave is really bloodily intense, even the sniper robots didn't have time to react.
Waiting for 20 blocks to be considered stable, otherwise I'm also scared.
Fortunately, I always wait for about 1 minute before leaving. It seems this habit has saved me more than once.
Those guys who quickly cancel orders at the second level are really playing with fire. The liquidation robots are just waiting there.
Confirming discipline is a matter of utmost importance; it directly determines whether you escape or go to zero.
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StakeWhisperer
· 01-14 21:17
Oh my god, these 10 blocks reorganization just scared me to pee myself
Wait, the robot can actually liquidate first, how to prevent that?
I just want to ask if anyone has actually encountered this situation
15 to 20 blocks confirmation? It takes a minute, I usually don't have that patience
The debt still shows, and the money is gone, this is too outrageous
Actually, it's just about not rushing, but who can do that?
View OriginalReply0
ILCollector
· 01-13 18:20
Really? I almost fell for this trick the day before yesterday, scared me to death
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So it's not just about transacting on the chain, you have to wait until it stabilizes completely
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This thing is even scarier than I thought... I need to develop a habit
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Wait, the liquidation bots must react countless times faster than me, how could I possibly win
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15 to 20 confirmations, oh my God, will anyone really wait for that... Be honest with me
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That's why I only use stable chains, the risk is much lower
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I was so scared I developed a psychological shadow, I dare not quickly operate to repay debts anymore
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By the way, is there any tool that can automatically monitor this confirmation process?
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Got it, next time I repay, I have to watch like a guard, can't leave the computer
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Ser_This_Is_A_Casino
· 01-13 03:18
Restructuring of 10 blocks? Bro, how bad is this network?
Wait, even liquidation machines can outperform chain restructuring? That logic doesn't hold up.
Honestly, I just see "Transaction Successful" and run, I've never waited for confirmation haha.
15 to 20 blocks is considered safe? Forget it, multi-chain hedging is more reliable.
Are robots this fast? I'm a bit scared now.
Calculating here when paying off debt, the pressure is off the charts.
Wow, there are such ridiculous situations, I’m impressed.
So DeFi lending is just gambling that the chain won't break, huh?
I waited a whole minute before I dared to close my eyes, and it still wasn't enough.
Secondary check? Come on, who has that kind of mood?
Looking at it this way, I really need to develop this habit, lessons learned the hard way.
Restructuring risks are extremely damaging, can't defend at critical moments.
No matter how much money you have, you can't handle the chain playing like this.
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BrokeBeans
· 01-12 21:49
Damn... I really can't hold it together when it comes to liquidation bots, it's just a nightmare scenario.
Wait, can this really happen? Or is it just clickbait?
15-20 bucks confirmation? I used to just leave once I saw the green checkmark, turns out it's so dangerous.
Lending protocols definitely need to be more cautious, or else you'll lose everything.
That's why I now have to wait about ten minutes before I dare to leave after repaying.
I'm exhausted, feeling like I have to be extremely cautious when doing any operation on the chain.
So real finality isn't that quick at all, we've all been fooled.
Double-checking really saved me once; when the debt data refreshed, I broke out in cold sweat.
Sorry, the feeling of this transaction not going through is really... exhausting.
Fortunately, I spoke out, or I would have been wiped out long ago.
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All-InQueen
· 01-12 21:47
Wait until 20 more blocks before daring to relax, really afraid of these restructuring tricks.
When the chain twitches, people are gone; still have to honestly watch the confirmed numbers jump.
Those who run after seeing success are all newbies; I now have to wait a few minutes before I dare to leave.
Lending is indeed risky; haven't we all almost flipped over a car before?
Discipline confirmation really can't be skipped; whoever is in a hurry will die.
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SatoshiLeftOnRead
· 01-12 21:46
Wait, does chain reorganization directly wipe out transactions? That's too outrageous, gotta mark it quickly.
I'm a bit scared now, I never thought about it so comprehensively before.
Honestly, I'm just worried about those weird edge cases that you can't think of in normal times.
15-20 confirmations sound stable, but who would really wait that long?
Are robots this fast? They can withdraw positions in just a few seconds.
Now I understand why old folks always say not to trust the word "success."
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TideReceder
· 01-12 21:40
Damn, this scene is really incredible... Luckily, I usually wait about ten minutes before feeling at ease.
View OriginalReply0
GamefiGreenie
· 01-12 21:30
This level of detail is amazing, it really scared me.
The part where the robot preemptively pulls the position was truly despairing.
Waiting for 20 blocks to confirm this suggestion is tough, but it’s necessary to do so.
I clearly paid back the money but still got liquidated, just thinking about it makes me suffocate.
So, the chain is not an unstoppable force; you have to learn to wait.
It seems I really need to change my previous microsecond operation habits.
The step of double-checking sounds troublesome, but it’s not worth mentioning compared to getting liquidated.
I now fully understand the concept of finality.
Imagine such a nightmare scenario—you're diligently replenishing collateral and repaying debt on a major public chain, watching transaction confirmations, thinking you've finally escaped danger. Suddenly, the chain experiences a sudden reorganization with 10 blocks deep, and your repayment operation instantly turns into a "orphaned block." Funds are returned along the original route, but the debt record still remains there. The most terrifying part is that during this few seconds of "time rewind," the liquidation bot preemptively snatched your position on the new chain. Clearly, you've repaid the money, but you're still liquidated.
This is not alarmist talk. Although such extreme cases rarely occur in actual networks, they are technically possible. Especially for operations like lending that are extremely sensitive to account status, reorganization risks can be fatal.
**The core issue lies in the confirmation discipline of finality.**
Many people see "transaction successful" and immediately relax—that is the most dangerous trading habit. On the blockchain, "success" is just the beginning; true security requires time for confirmation. The specific approach is simple but crucial:
1. Do not operate within seconds. After completing critical operations like repayment or collateral replenishment, do not rush to broadcast or leave. Give the chain some time to respond.
2. Wait for sufficient block confirmations. At least see 15 to 20 subsequent blocks being added (which takes about 1 minute on some major public chains). Only when the block explorer shows your transaction has been "deeply buried" under enough new blocks is it truly settled.
3. Double-check without hassle. During the waiting period, actively refresh the lending protocol data to confirm that the debt shows as repaid and the account shows the collateral replenished. Seeing is believing.
Blockchain gives us financial autonomy, but it also places more complex risk management responsibilities on us. Mastering confirmation discipline is the strongest defense against such extreme scenarios.