#数字资产生态回暖 Why are contracts so aggressive, and why is the dream of a one-night turnaround so strong?
Look at it from a different perspective—every sudden crash, every sharp rally, there’s someone winning and someone losing. The difference isn’t talent; it’s whether you can spot these traps.
Since I entered the scene in February 2018, going from 200,000 capital to liquidation, zeroing out, and starting over, I’ve seen through the secrets behind trading volume over these 8 years. It’s not about luck, but about a set of repeatable logic.
Here are six unbreakable rules I’ve listed:
**Rule 1: Don’t get itchy during sharp rises** Ten rapid surges, eight are orchestrated by the big players setting traps. If volume doesn’t keep up? That’s a fake move. My strategy is to eat the second wave, not to jump into the first emotional frenzy.
**Rule 2: Don’t rush to buy the dip** A flash crash followed by a rebound? 99% of the time, it’s bait. The real bottom is formed gradually, not suddenly pulled up.
**Rule 3: When there’s volume at high levels, stay steady** Having trading volume indicates someone is still betting; if volume dries up? The big players have already exited. During sideways consolidation with low volume, I never force an entry.
**Rule 4: Avoid the暴量 at bottoms** The real start is sustained volume combined with decreasing volume on pullbacks; a fake start is just a single暴量 candle followed by instant burnout.
**Rule 5: Volume is the root, price is the fruit** This is the core idea. Moving with volume and trend is the way to survive; going against it is suicide.
**Rule 6: The highest level of trading is “nothing”** No greed allows you to retreat completely at high levels; no fear gives you confidence to enter after a breakdown; no obsession helps you hold a vacant position.
In these 8 years, I’ve seen very clever people blow up by operating against the trend, and I’ve also seen disciplined traders turn losses into profits step by step. The market never deceives fools; it only punishes greed and complacency.
If you want to learn how to distinguish real surges from fake rebounds, and want to survive and thrive in this market—key isn’t how much you earn in a day, but your ability not to lose money.
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Rugpull幸存者
· 3h ago
Sounds nice, but in reality, it's mostly about luck avoiding pitfalls
Volume can be deceiving, prices can be deceiving, in the end, it's all a psychological battle
The second wave requires enough people to buy in as well
Talking about plans on paper is easy, but when it comes to real trading, your fingers will tremble
Without attachment, it's an ideal state, but once you see your account drop, your mentality collapses
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SandwichTrader
· 12-10 15:11
Honestly, I really dislike stories where a single candlestick changes someone's life. But this guy's explanation of the volume-price relationship really hits the point, especially that line "Volume is the root, price is the fruit." I have previously suffered heavy losses because I didn't believe in this. However, I still believe that the market always has new tricks, and there are no absolute rules.
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BlockchainBard
· 12-10 15:02
After all these years, it's still the same trick. You can't fool people with trading volume.
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GasFeeGazer
· 12-10 15:01
The combination of price and volume is indeed a learned skill, but after eight years, still talking about this approach—doesn't that indicate the market has nothing new?
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SadMoneyMeow
· 12-10 14:56
To be honest, I have known about the relationship between volume and price for a long time, the key is execution, and I will still chase it when my hands itch...
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LiquidatedAgain
· 12-10 14:50
Still talking about volume... Brother, you're right, but these 8 years I've been doing the opposite, and I'm still in the process of adding positions haha
It's really just greed. When I go all-in at a high price, I get wiped out at the liquidation level. Every time I think I see through everything, but as I always say—the market only punishes those who are lucky
It's easy to say you won't lose money, but actually executing it is really tough
Wish I knew earlier, looking at your summary, I start to reflect again... The key is, I will still make the same mistakes next time
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ETHmaxi_NoFilter
· 12-10 14:49
There's nothing wrong with this approach, but I see too many people forget it after reading. The issue isn't with the rule itself; the key is whether you can truly hold back during a sudden surge. That's the real hellish difficulty.
#数字资产生态回暖 Why are contracts so aggressive, and why is the dream of a one-night turnaround so strong?
Look at it from a different perspective—every sudden crash, every sharp rally, there’s someone winning and someone losing. The difference isn’t talent; it’s whether you can spot these traps.
Since I entered the scene in February 2018, going from 200,000 capital to liquidation, zeroing out, and starting over, I’ve seen through the secrets behind trading volume over these 8 years. It’s not about luck, but about a set of repeatable logic.
Here are six unbreakable rules I’ve listed:
**Rule 1: Don’t get itchy during sharp rises**
Ten rapid surges, eight are orchestrated by the big players setting traps. If volume doesn’t keep up? That’s a fake move. My strategy is to eat the second wave, not to jump into the first emotional frenzy.
**Rule 2: Don’t rush to buy the dip**
A flash crash followed by a rebound? 99% of the time, it’s bait. The real bottom is formed gradually, not suddenly pulled up.
**Rule 3: When there’s volume at high levels, stay steady**
Having trading volume indicates someone is still betting; if volume dries up? The big players have already exited. During sideways consolidation with low volume, I never force an entry.
**Rule 4: Avoid the暴量 at bottoms**
The real start is sustained volume combined with decreasing volume on pullbacks; a fake start is just a single暴量 candle followed by instant burnout.
**Rule 5: Volume is the root, price is the fruit**
This is the core idea. Moving with volume and trend is the way to survive; going against it is suicide.
**Rule 6: The highest level of trading is “nothing”**
No greed allows you to retreat completely at high levels; no fear gives you confidence to enter after a breakdown; no obsession helps you hold a vacant position.
In these 8 years, I’ve seen very clever people blow up by operating against the trend, and I’ve also seen disciplined traders turn losses into profits step by step. The market never deceives fools; it only punishes greed and complacency.
If you want to learn how to distinguish real surges from fake rebounds, and want to survive and thrive in this market—key isn’t how much you earn in a day, but your ability not to lose money.