I recommend you a website with many functions: First, on the homepage, the top is the curve of the total locked value of the Defi protocol. There are three data on the upper left, namely the total locked value, that is, TVL, the 24-hour change of TVL, and the dominance ratio of the Lido protocol. Below is a list of various Defi applications, where you can directly view the classification, TVL and change data of each Defi application. The default is sorted by TVL. You can click on the classification at the back to enter the corresponding classification. Then, we look at the upper left side, which is the panel area, which contains a lot of on-chain data. The first item at the top is the Defi classification. Let me introduce some of the more commonly used contents in the Defi classification. Overview, which shows the overall data and charts of Defi. Chain, which is the Defi data and charts of each blockchain. Of course, the highest TVL here must be Ethereum. Forks, let's go in and take a look. This is the total fork value of some protocols. The projects shown here will have other projects forked them. For example, uniSwap has 394 forked its protocols. The so-called fork here should be directly using the code of the original protocol to establish a same level, or conducting secondary development based on the original program. Therefore, most of these projects are excellent original projects. Top Protocols, which shows the ranking of applications in each Defi category in each blockchain ecosystem. Categories, which lists the subcategories of Defi. You can click on each category to view the application data under this category. The second item under Defi, Yields, is where you can view the income of each protocol. The third and fourth items are Defillma's aggregated Swap and aggregated lending query, respectively. I will not introduce them in detail, and leverage is not recommended. The fifth item is CEX transparency query, where you can see the assets and capital flows of exchanges such as Binance and Ouyi. This is still useful, especially when the bull market turns to bear market, everyone should pay attention to the capital situation of the platform they use. The sixth item is on-chain liquidation data. You can view many currencies, the default is ETH, and there is a price under each vertical bar, indicating how much funds will be liquidated in each application at this price of ETH.You can come and have a look during the bear market. The seventh item is transaction volume. There are three sub-items here, which can query the transaction volume of each application, the exchanges on each chain, and option transactions. It is relatively simple, so I will not show them to you one by one. The eighth item is the gas fee consumed by each application on the chain. This can show the activity of the application. It is also relatively simple. You can figure it out by yourself. Next, we count down. The fourth item from the bottom is investment data. You can view the total investment scale and which projects active investors have invested in in the past 30 days. Some friends like to study early projects. Don't miss this investment information. The third-to-last item is stablecoin data, and the second-to-last item is stolen information. The last item is Ethereum liquidity pledge data, including the total pledge value of Ethereum and the pledge value of each LSD application.