#数字资产市场动态 I have a friend who was attracted by the idea of a "potential new coin" during the bear market phase and made a firm decision to invest his entire assets. The past couple of days, the market moved aggressively, with the coin's price multiplying several times, and he was so excited he couldn't sleep. Who knew that five days later, it plummeted straight down, his account in the red, and he was completely wiped out.



This harsh lesson made him realize one thing: making money in the crypto world seems to be about technology and prospects, but in reality, it's a covert battle of funds and connections.

First, you need large capital backing you up. The rise and fall of the coin price is essentially controlled by the flow of funds. The true players are those who quietly accumulate at low levels without making a fuss. When they want to push the price up, it easily increases several times. What can you observe? Sudden increase in trading volume at the bottom and continuous influx of funds—these are usually signs of the main players setting up, and subsequent price surges are almost guaranteed.

Second, community support is indispensable. No matter how good the project is, if the discussion heat dies out, it’s useless. Coins with no community popularity or influence will inevitably become stagnant, and at that point, it’s hard to extricate yourself.

So, to judge whether a coin is worth paying attention to, there are only two criteria: whether the main players have truly entered, and whether the community buzz is hot enough. Both conditions must be met before there’s room for research and participation.

To survive longer in this market, instead of obsessing over K-line charts, it’s better to focus on observing the invisible hands behind the scenes. Understanding the flow of funds and the logic of project teams helps avoid common traps and catch the main upward trend early.
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staking_grampsvip
· 4h ago
It sounds like your friend got caught in a scam, and the feeling of a five-day dream shattering is indeed tough. Really, chasing hot new coins is just like gambling; the big players have already laid their traps. The term "community popularity" is accurate; coins with no buzz don't even attract attention when they dump.
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WenAirdropvip
· 4h ago
No problem with that, the capital game has too high a threshold to play. The main players can harvest a batch of retail investors in just a meal, we can only wait for signals. Wait, how do we judge the community's popularity? Is it by looking at the active users on Discord or something else? It feels like even the community is just packaging now, and real discussions are becoming fewer and fewer. Relying on storytelling about the prospects, relying on capital to sustain, and in the end, retail investors are the ones who suffer. Is my friend's coin dead now, or has he already cut his losses and run? Are you guys completely in now or just scared? I think you should learn to read the main player's cost line. The depth chart is completely unclear, so we can only bet on probabilities. Rather than waiting for a major upward trend, it's better to go all-in directly; anyway, if you lose, you lose.
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ChainPoetvip
· 5h ago
That's right, capital flow is the real truth. --- It's the same old trick of cutting leeks; hype can't hide the fundamentals. --- I just want to know how this guy is doing now, has he re-entered the market? --- Can community hype really be relied upon? In the end, it still depends on who spends the money. --- A sudden increase in bottom trading volume is a really accurate signal; you must check it before bottom fishing. --- Damn, got caught in another dead coin, I'm done. --- Main players accumulating, community hype building—this is the core of the crypto world. --- The problem is how to distinguish whether a community's hype is genuine or just shilled by bots. --- Looking at K-line charts too much can make you blind; it's better to follow the capital flow. --- He suffered heavy losses this time, but at least he figured it out. Many people never do.
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MagicBeanvip
· 5h ago
Honestly, this set of theories sounds like a hindsight summary; friends should have understood it long ago. Really, all-in on new coins is gambling. After playing with Ponzi schemes for so many years, are people still falling for it? Community hype? Uh... do those bot spam messages count as hype? Understanding the fund flow? I feel like it's all just post-hoc analysis. When trading volume at the bottom increases, can you really buy the dip? Wake up, buddy, it's 2024. Still the same advice: the fastest way to make money is not to participate. Stable winners are all off-chain.
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GasFeeDodgervip
· 5h ago
Honestly, all-in on new coins is just gambling, no one to blame --- I've seen through the main players' accumulation tactics a long time ago, just worried about reacting one step too late --- Community hype can be faked, this is something to be cautious about --- Volume at the bottom is indeed a signal, but these days there are too many ways to cut the leeks --- Instead of studying the main players' logic, it's more practical to learn how to cut losses first --- This friend lost everything, at least diversify your risks next time --- Control of funds and connections are everything, small investors can't compete --- I've definitely avoided many pitfalls by steering clear of deadwater coins in the community --- You can't see the true intentions of the whales just from candlestick charts; on-chain data is necessary --- Meeting both conditions doesn't necessarily mean you'll make money; my lessons are painfully clear --- If you want to live longer, always remember, there are no true friends here, only interests
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DegenApeSurfervip
· 5h ago
Honestly, this set of theories sounds reasonable, but very few people can truly see through the funding aspect. --- Another bloody lesson, these kinds of things happen every day in a bear market. --- Community popularity is indeed an invisible killer; a silent Discord can be terrifying. --- I've seen quite a few false breakouts with volume at the bottom; the main players just love to deceive retail investors. --- Instead of studying these, it's better to ask yourself how much you can lose and still sleep well. --- That’s a bit of a wake-up call; applying this theory to your own holdings instantly makes you more aware. --- It looks easy to analyze capital flow, but in reality, trading is all about guessing; who dares to really gamble? --- Two rulers sound intimidating, but in fact, the market is just a random walk; if you're serious, you'll lose. --- The truth is simple: big players are playing, and we're just along for the ride. --- More and more of these experience posts are appearing, indicating that more and more people are getting cut.
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