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Most people get stuck at 3,000, but he managed to reach 300k with these two steps.
This is a fan submission. After reading it, you’ll realize that many people aren’t unable to make money; it’s that their methods were wrong from the very beginning. $RAVE
He said that at first he only had 3,000 yuan, which he borrowed from a friend. When converted to the crypto world, that’s about 400U. This number is enough for most people to give up right away, but he didn’t. $PROM
He said it very directly: turning a small amount of capital around isn’t about gambling—it’s about rhythm.
First stage: From a few hundred U to the first pot of real gains
At the beginning, he didn’t rush to scale up; instead, he specifically set aside a small portion of the funds as a “trial-and-error position.”
The logic is simple—use the smallest cost to gain the most experience.
He keeps his focus on market hotspots, but he doesn’t stay and fight for long:
If there’s an opportunity, he enters; if there’s profit, he exits. Once he judges wrong, he immediately cuts losses.
The funds slowly compounded from 100U to 200U, then to 400U—amplifying step by step, not going all-in in one move.
Many get stuck here, because they get inflated after making a little money, and lose control after taking a small loss.
And he always does just one thing: controlling the rhythm.
Once the funds are gradually accumulated to more than 1,000U, he starts changing his strategy—
short-term trading to improve capital utilization, and medium-term trading to catch trends.
Once a trend is clearly formed, he doesn’t easily get off.
He said that the biggest takeaway in that stage wasn’t money, but realizing this:
The money in the market isn’t made by struggling to earn it—it’s made by “acting only after you’re right.”
Second stage: From small capital to a qualitative change
After the account gradually grows larger, he actually becomes even more “slow.”
He no longer operates frequently. Instead, he manages the funds by splitting them:
one part follows the trend, one part holds long term, and another part is used to flexibly respond to market fluctuations.
The number of trades becomes less, but each move is made with more confidence.
He said that what truly widens the gap is never frequency—it’s judgment at critical moments.
Many can’t do this because they can’t resist—
when they see volatility, they want to enter; when they see opportunities, they want to chase.
But what the market lacks the least is “traps that look like opportunities.”
He said that what’s hardest on this path isn’t the technology; it’s two points:
self-discipline, and execution.
If you’re still losing repeatedly, or you always end up falling in the same place, the problem is often not the market—it’s the method.
Many think they’re missing luck, but what they really lack is a complete set of logic, and a perspective that helps you see the direction clearly.