The forward tilt of the main gear means that the leading two tires will touchdown first.
You have to have the sink rate perfect, runway alignment, and lateral drift perfect, and as that happens, if you get it just right, the airplane will settle on to the rear main gear smoothly.
If not, when the leading edge of the main trucks touchdown, those gear will cancel the drift and align the fuselage, rapidly, lurching the aircraft to the side. It feels rough, even though the sink rate was maybe 1 to 200 feet per minute same as a “greased” landing in other aircraft.
There are other airplanes that are so very much easier. The 747, the 777, and the A320, for example.
I’ve never flown the 737, but the main gear on that airplane caster +/- 4 degrees, so if you don’t have the runway alignment or drift perfect, then the touchdown still feels pretty good to the passengers.
That same level of precision and skill (being off a degree in runway alignment) in a 767 will have people looking at you when they get off the airplane, because they will feel the “lurch“ and assume you just smacked it into the runway, which isn’t what happened.