The RDTS fork activates at a specific height. Unless they have at least close to half the hashrate, as soon as the non-RDTS chain finds a block they’ll get behind and continue to fall behind further.
The behavior you describe would apply if RDTS activated with a majority of the hashrate: every non-RDTS block would cause a short fork and then be reorged out.
The RDTS fork activates at a specific height. Unless they have at least close to half the hashrate, as soon as the non-RDTS chain finds a block they’ll get behind and continue to fall behind further.
The behavior you describe would apply if RDTS activated with a majority of the hashrate: every non-RDTS block would cause a short fork and then be reorged out.