I have to admit, this wave of small coins has caused me to lose $6,000, a truly painful lesson.
After calming down and reviewing, I realized that I just fell into the old trap of the crypto world—chasing highs and selling lows. The price of others' coins has already skyrocketed by thousands of times, and I still foolishly chased in. What is this called? This is called deserved loss.
But the loss also taught me that instead of chasing hot coins at high levels, it's better to turn around and ambush those small coins that haven't exploded yet. Just like hunting, you need to set up the trap before the prey appears.
Recently, I have been focusing on the Chinese meme ecosystem. To be honest, small-cap coins in this track do present opportunities. I now hold a Chinese meme coin called "Pig Slaughtering Meal," which was just recently launched and is still in the fundraising stage. Why am I optimistic about it? It's simple—during the Spring Festival, the term "Pig Slaughtering Meal" will become a hot word, and the holiday effect can generate a wave of popularity, with a good chance of explosive growth later, possibly even landing on mainstream exchanges.
If you also like this ambush strategy, you can try using a few tens of USDT, aiming for a hundredfold return. Remember one thing: don't go all-in; diversifying risk is the key to longevity. That's how the crypto world works—opportunities and risks always coexist.
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FreeMinter
· 01-17 22:23
$6000, that really hurts. But I think your reflection is quite valuable compared to losing money.
Laying in wait for the right track is indeed more reliable than chasing highs, but I think the risk with Chinese memes isn't small either; things like holiday effects are too虚 (虚 means "虚" in Chinese, which can mean "虚" or "虚" in this context, but since it's a translation, it might be better to interpret as "illusory" or "虚" as "虚" in Chinese, but in English, it could be "illusory" or "superficial").
Trying a few tens of U.S. dollars is no problem, mainly just don't get carried away. No need to say more.
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GmGmNoGn
· 01-16 04:52
$6000 just disappeared like that, brother, now I really get it.
Things like pig slaughter meals... I believe in riding the hot topics during the Spring Festival, but small coins are just gambling. Don't use spreading the risk as an excuse.
People who chase the high always regret it in the end. This shit is really true.
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ForkItAllDay
· 01-15 00:55
$6000, now you're really one of us in the crypto world. The old tricks of chasing highs and selling lows still catch some people.
Speaking of sneaky small coins, I have to question the logic of the Spring Festival effect. It always feels a bit like gambling.
Trying a few USDT to test the waters is fine, but don't take hundredfold returns seriously, big brother.
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P2ENotWorking
· 01-15 00:55
Haha, lost $6000 and still dare to ambush new coins? I'm really convinced, I've seen this trick too many times.
Pig slaughter feast? Spring Festival buzzwords? Bro, your logic here is the same as the last time you lost money, haven't learned your lesson yet.
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LiquidationWizard
· 01-15 00:46
Another story of being chased high and learning the lesson. The $6000 can be considered tuition, but the way to review it does have some value.
The pig slaughtering coin... The hype around it during the Spring Festival, sounds just like those holiday concept coins last time, which all ended up dying at the exchange entrance.
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FlippedSignal
· 01-15 00:31
Another brother who got cut by small coins, $6000 is not a small amount, it hurts a bit.
Wait, now you're going to ambush Chinese memes again? The name "Pig Killing Meal" sounds like cutting leeks, not hunting prey.
The Spring Festival hot word "turnaround"—I feel like it's the same reason you gave last time for chasing the rise?
You promised not to go all-in, but aren't you still betting a hundred times again? Is this really different this time?
Talking about diversifying risk sounds good, but the problem is you haven't diversified at all, still digging in the same pit.
The crypto world is always like this, lessons learned over and over, but only a few really change.
I have to admit, this wave of small coins has caused me to lose $6,000, a truly painful lesson.
After calming down and reviewing, I realized that I just fell into the old trap of the crypto world—chasing highs and selling lows. The price of others' coins has already skyrocketed by thousands of times, and I still foolishly chased in. What is this called? This is called deserved loss.
But the loss also taught me that instead of chasing hot coins at high levels, it's better to turn around and ambush those small coins that haven't exploded yet. Just like hunting, you need to set up the trap before the prey appears.
Recently, I have been focusing on the Chinese meme ecosystem. To be honest, small-cap coins in this track do present opportunities. I now hold a Chinese meme coin called "Pig Slaughtering Meal," which was just recently launched and is still in the fundraising stage. Why am I optimistic about it? It's simple—during the Spring Festival, the term "Pig Slaughtering Meal" will become a hot word, and the holiday effect can generate a wave of popularity, with a good chance of explosive growth later, possibly even landing on mainstream exchanges.
If you also like this ambush strategy, you can try using a few tens of USDT, aiming for a hundredfold return. Remember one thing: don't go all-in; diversifying risk is the key to longevity. That's how the crypto world works—opportunities and risks always coexist.