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Many people have taken a hit on MEME, but essentially it's not a problem with the ability to select coins, rather it's because they started with the wrong amount of money.
To put it simply, MEME is always about using small amounts of money to gamble on big results. The opposite logic is losing money. If you're playing MEME with core assets or capital meant for a turnaround, the probability of losing has already been locked in.
My investment framework is very straightforward—MEME-type assets should not account for more than 10% of the total funds; this is the ceiling. Once you exceed this number, you're no longer investing, but gambling with emotions and dopamine. Even if your capital grows later, you must strictly stick to this upper limit; only the absolute number increases.
So how should you operate the MEME gameplay? There are actually two key indicators:
First, it shouldn't be painful even if you lose everything. If a MEME coin drops to zero and your reaction is to treat it as tuition rather than losing sleep, it means you're using the right amount of money. Conversely, if you start to worry over minor drawdowns, it proves you've already exceeded the safe boundary.
Second, be aggressive when making profits. Only go all-in after a 10x or 100x return; that's what it means to gamble small for big. Investing 100U and turning it into 10,000U if you pick the right one—that's the correct way to play MEME. After winning, immediately transfer the profits into more stable assets and avoid greed.
In summary: MEME is a playground for trial-and-error funds, not an arena for core assets. Only those who understand this distinction can survive in this cycle.