Having been in the crypto space for so long, I’ve noticed a phenomenon—most people want to take shortcuts, chasing hot topics every day, waiting for news, betting on the next爆币. To be honest, this path is destined to hit pitfalls.
I personally went from 20,000 U to 1,400,000 U, not because I’m particularly smart, but simply because I stuck to a consistent approach.
While others place over ten orders overnight, I’m satisfied with one or two a day. While others go all-in on trending coins, I focus on a few mainstream coins and watch them closely. Others stare at candlestick charts without blinking; I’m more like a stone—unless it’s a critical point, I don’t move at all.
My strategy is actually very simple, but it’s this simplicity that makes it effective:
Lock in 2 to 3 familiar coins, don’t scatter your focus. Calculate your entry and exit points in advance; wait until the conditions are met, then execute—this is called having a plan. Set your position sizes firmly, never go all-in, always keep some ammunition. Once take-profit or stop-loss orders are placed, treat them as if they don’t exist; no matter how crazy the market gets, don’t change your plan.
This method sounds incredibly stupid, but it’s precisely this stupidity that makes the most money.
Looking back over these two years, the market has never wiped out those who don’t know how to trade, but those who can’t control their fingers. I didn’t have a smooth ride either; the period starting from 20,000 was painfully slow, earning a little, losing a little, and at one point shrinking to just over 10,000. The turning point was— I didn’t add to positions or make reckless moves; I just endured. Climbing step by step, eventually reaching where I am today.
Can this result be replicated? Yes. But the only prerequisite is—being able to endure boredom and let go of impatience. Trade less, protect your positions, think through your trading logic thoroughly before acting. Staying in the crypto space for a long time has always been about stability, not ruthlessness.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
17 Likes
Reward
17
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MEVictim
· 15h ago
Exactly right, a careless mistake can ruin a lifetime—I've experienced this firsthand.
View OriginalReply0
DoomCanister
· 15h ago
There's nothing wrong with that, it's just that most people can't do such simple things, and I can't either, haha.
View OriginalReply0
FrontRunFighter
· 16h ago
nah this reads like cope for ppl who got rekt chasing shitcoins... dude's preaching discipline but half these "main coins" he's watching prob got frontrun to hell anyway lol
Reply0
TeaTimeTrader
· 16h ago
Well said, it's really just that you can't control your fingers when it matters most. I used to chase every day too, and ended up losing so much that I was left with just my underwear.
View OriginalReply0
MagicBean
· 16h ago
That's exactly right, but too many people can't control that hand. I also realized after experiencing setbacks that doing nothing is the hardest thing.
View OriginalReply0
PrivateKeyParanoia
· 16h ago
That's right, losing control of your fingers is truly the number one killer in the crypto world.
Having been in the crypto space for so long, I’ve noticed a phenomenon—most people want to take shortcuts, chasing hot topics every day, waiting for news, betting on the next爆币. To be honest, this path is destined to hit pitfalls.
I personally went from 20,000 U to 1,400,000 U, not because I’m particularly smart, but simply because I stuck to a consistent approach.
While others place over ten orders overnight, I’m satisfied with one or two a day. While others go all-in on trending coins, I focus on a few mainstream coins and watch them closely. Others stare at candlestick charts without blinking; I’m more like a stone—unless it’s a critical point, I don’t move at all.
My strategy is actually very simple, but it’s this simplicity that makes it effective:
Lock in 2 to 3 familiar coins, don’t scatter your focus. Calculate your entry and exit points in advance; wait until the conditions are met, then execute—this is called having a plan. Set your position sizes firmly, never go all-in, always keep some ammunition. Once take-profit or stop-loss orders are placed, treat them as if they don’t exist; no matter how crazy the market gets, don’t change your plan.
This method sounds incredibly stupid, but it’s precisely this stupidity that makes the most money.
Looking back over these two years, the market has never wiped out those who don’t know how to trade, but those who can’t control their fingers. I didn’t have a smooth ride either; the period starting from 20,000 was painfully slow, earning a little, losing a little, and at one point shrinking to just over 10,000. The turning point was— I didn’t add to positions or make reckless moves; I just endured. Climbing step by step, eventually reaching where I am today.
Can this result be replicated? Yes. But the only prerequisite is—being able to endure boredom and let go of impatience. Trade less, protect your positions, think through your trading logic thoroughly before acting. Staying in the crypto space for a long time has always been about stability, not ruthlessness.