thanks for the update! I'm super jealous you already have one of these bad boys.
I'll tag onto
@DutchBoy's comment with an observation. I've had a little bit of experience with the oyster card and a few similar tap-metro-card systems, but by far the place i've had to deal with this kind of NFC (or nfc-esque, idk what they use) tech most often is at Disneyworld. They use magicbands and tap cards for access everywhere, including all parks, hotel rooms, and other attractions. Given the giant crowds they have at the parks, as well as a huge need to appear efficient, they have a few design tricks to get everyone access to one of the readers for something ,without creating large bottlenecks. At park gates and other large openings (think platform entrances for LRT) they have readers arrayed in Vs of 4, so that 4 people can scan at once, and the second reader is visible to oncoming traffic, even if the first is in use. they also place readers in places where your hand would naturally want to tap, near the ends of railings and such. Lastly, most importantly, the readers are EVERYWHERE, impossible to miss.
Looking at LRT specifically, our platforms do not have remotely enough readers for the kind of traffic they receive, and it will be inconvenient for people to tap them. I think there's going to be a lot of people not bothering to tap, unless we start adding a lot more readers. I don't think we need turnstiles or anything for this, but i have doubts about the current setup.