How did the 35x return come about? Don’t talk about luck—I’m talking about the method.



Starting with a principal of 2,000 yuan, the account now holds 70,000. You might think this sounds like a dream, but let me tell you—it’s not gambling, and it’s definitely not mystical. What I play is rolling positions, like rolling a snowball—locking in a bit of profit each time, then pushing forward. Sounds simple? But so many people fall at the first step.

**Early Stage: Survival with 2,000U**
At the very beginning with those 2,000 yuan, I didn’t even think about multiplying it several times. What was I doing then? Learning the rules, getting the rhythm, and not dying. Three golden rules:
Leverage? Maximum 3x—any more is just giving money to the market;
Take profit and run, only take opportunities you can see clearly;
Each stop-loss is strictly capped at 5% of total funds, no hesitation.

During that time, the account grew slowly, but nothing major ever happened. The worst drawdown was 18%, then I steadily grew the principal to 6,000U. You know, many people can’t even get through this stage—they either lose everything or their mindset collapses halfway.

**Mid Stage: Transition from Defense to Offense**
After reaching 6,000U, I started changing my tactics. I began to appropriately increase leverage, but never went all-in recklessly. I watched for three signals:
The market trend is clear enough;
I can understand the chip distribution;
There are no conflicting news factors.

If these three conditions are met, I make mid-term trades. Add positions as the trend rises, and partially take profits after a rise. What’s the key? I change my take-profit point to a “break-even stop-loss”—either keep making money or at least don’t lose. This move saved me several times.

**Late Stage: The Combo of Position Splitting + Compounding**
From 20,000 to 70,000, I stopped focusing on just one account. The strategy became: split positions, diversify more points.
Simply put—never put all your chips in one direction. Lock in profits when you have them, let your money make money. My biggest insight at this stage? Don’t be greedy for that last bite—leave when you’ve had enough. The market will always have the next opportunity, but your principal may have only one life.

**A Word from the Heart**
Rolling positions is about discipline, not inspiration.
There are plenty of people in crypto looking to get rich overnight, but those who survive several bull and bear cycles and still make stable profits all understand one thing: slow is fast.

From 2,000 to 70,000, I never bet my life, nor did I count on luck. I just made every step solid—stop loss when needed, add positions when needed, withdraw when needed. This approach can be as complicated or as simple as you make it—the key is whether you can control your hands and your mind.

Once you master the rhythm, doubling your money really isn’t that hard. But the premise is: you have to survive first.
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SchroedingerAirdropvip
· 2025-12-12 16:15
Stop-loss is really the key to life and death. How many people have fallen victim to greed, I agree.
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GateUser-afe07a92vip
· 2025-12-12 12:44
There's nothing wrong with that; the core is to stay alive, everything else is secondary.
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AlphaLeakervip
· 2025-12-11 16:59
You're right, discipline is the key, and losing your composure will ruin everything.
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QuorumVotervip
· 2025-12-10 01:12
Sounds good, but only one in ten thousand can truly follow this discipline.
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SandwichVictimvip
· 2025-12-10 01:12
The key is still self-discipline, but even after so many people hear this, they'll still go all-in...
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BearMarketMonkvip
· 2025-12-10 01:04
This is a perfect example of survivorship bias... No matter how nicely it's presented, it doesn't change the reality that nine out of ten people fail at the second step.
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SelfCustodyBrovip
· 2025-12-10 01:01
Everything you said is correct, but it's hard to put into practice. So many people know the logic behind stop-loss, but when they're actually losing money, their hands still shake.
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TestnetScholarvip
· 2025-12-10 01:00
Uh... is it really not just luck? Then what about the last time I lost everything... Never mind, I get your rolling position logic now—the key is still discipline.
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AirdropHuntressvip
· 2025-12-10 00:59
The data looks fine, but the key is whether you can really withstand the drawdown when it happens.

Where’s the account screenshot? These days I don’t believe anything without a live trading record.

Most people simply can’t stick to the iron rule of a 5% stop loss. Once your mindset collapses, it’s all over.

How do you determine the chip distribution part? Please explain in more detail.

Does historical data show that this method really works in a bear market?

Saying “don’t be greedy” is right, but actually executing it is hellishly difficult.
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