On July 3rd, just after 4 PM, I received a message about an airdrop of $M. This recent hot project on Kaito also went live. I opened the Binance app and saw the trend was actually continuously rising. Looking again, the price was 0.46 and quickly pulled up to 0.05+. Just then, Bitget popped up a message announcing the M/USDT trading pair. I clicked in to take a look, and the price was actually over 0.07. I jumped up and quickly looked for a cross-chain bridge. Five minutes later, the group provided an address to move $M from BSC to MemeCore. I then quickly bought 500U of $M to attempt the cross-chain, and the price at that time was around 0.056.

Then I started cross-chain ( @mesonfi ), choosing fast arrival (2-3 minutes). I waited about 10 minutes and it still hadn't arrived, then I went to DC to open a ticket, only to be told that there was no quota left, and I couldn't get a refund yet. I had to wait until there was a quota to continue executing, which might take several hours. I cursed again; can this brick-moving process really be delayed by a few hours?

Waiting and waiting, finally at 6 PM I crossed over. I opened BG and saw it was under review. My anxious heart relaxed a bit. Looking again, the price of $M was still quite strong, and the price on BG was surprisingly around 0.065. Then it was just waiting again, I waited 20 minutes, but it still hadn't arrived. I saw the price had dropped to 0.063 and hurried to ask customer service. The result I got was that manual operation was needed, and I had to pay attention within 24 hours. I cursed again; what a garbage exchange, it takes a day just to get a recharge? At that time, it was already 18:50, and I thought this brick-moving attempt seemed to be a mess.

Another hour passed when suddenly I was notified that the recharge was successful. At that time, the price of $M was around 0.06, so I quickly sold it, ultimately making a profit of 24U after deducting costs. I was on edge for nearly 4 hours; I really felt like cursing.

Conclusion: Moving bricks requires caution, especially finding reliable cross-chain bridges and trustworthy exchanges.