In these years of crypto circles, the questions asked are all kinds of strange. But to be honest, there are only a few high-frequency questions.
I looked through my chat history and found that two questions appear with disproportionately high frequency.
💬 The first one: About bottom fishing
Friends who trade love to ask: “💬 Now that this coin is at this level, can I buy the dip?”
This question seems simple, but there are many underlying nuances. Market sentiment, technical analysis, fund flows—if you don’t understand each of these aspects, bottom fishing can turn into digging into your own savings. Many people get itchy when the price drops, but they don’t think about why it’s dropping or where it might go.
Bottom fishing isn’t about whether something is cheap or not; it’s about whether it’s worth it.
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BakedCatFanboy
· 12-14 00:41
Bottom catching is gambling; anyone claiming to be able to precisely catch the bottom is just bluffing.
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ProposalManiac
· 12-13 22:03
To be honest, there's something wrong with the way this question is asked. Asking only "Can I copy?" without inquiring about the mechanism or fundamentals is no different from gambling. Most people probably haven't even thought through the framework of where the true game-theoretic equilibrium lies.
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WhaleWatcher
· 12-13 11:25
Really, bottom-fishing is the easiest way to get people trapped. I've seen too many people ask if they can buy the dip, only to fall headfirst, and then they realize what endless decline truly means.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 12-11 13:00
The biggest pitfall when bottom-fishing is mentality. The more the price drops, the more people want to scoop up the bargains, only to get caught off guard. This cycle repeats year after year.
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MoonRocketTeam
· 12-11 12:56
Buddy, that's why so many people get burned by rockets instead of actually launching into space... They just ask if they can copy it and that's it, never wondering if they're actually cut out for it.
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ApeWithNoChain
· 12-11 12:54
Really, those who immediately want to buy the dip when they see a decline are just rookies' self-cultivation; once the question reaches this level, there's basically no hope.
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liquidation_watcher
· 12-11 12:50
Bottom fishing is most easily turned into depleting your assets. Truly, I've seen too many people get envious and rush in whenever prices drop.
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PanicSeller69
· 12-11 12:42
The most annoying thing about bottom-fishing is when a bunch of people ask if they can buy in, and as a result, they all become bag holders... I've also suffered this loss many times.
In these years of crypto circles, the questions asked are all kinds of strange. But to be honest, there are only a few high-frequency questions.
I looked through my chat history and found that two questions appear with disproportionately high frequency.
💬 The first one: About bottom fishing
Friends who trade love to ask: “💬 Now that this coin is at this level, can I buy the dip?”
This question seems simple, but there are many underlying nuances. Market sentiment, technical analysis, fund flows—if you don’t understand each of these aspects, bottom fishing can turn into digging into your own savings. Many people get itchy when the price drops, but they don’t think about why it’s dropping or where it might go.
Bottom fishing isn’t about whether something is cheap or not; it’s about whether it’s worth it.