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These days, watching memes and narrative charts, it's really lively, but the easiest way to mess people up is "thinking you can still run in time."
I usually don't focus on K-line charts first; I watch the mempool: once you start seeing transactions that break down into dozens of parts, with paths looping around and still eating slippage, it's basically feeding MEV.
Later, if you manually click to sell, there's a high chance you'll get caught in a queue + slippage double whammy.
My stop-loss now is more like "pre-written": before entering, I think clearly—if the price drops below a certain on-chain dense trading zone or support from large orders (the visible kind), I just withdraw, no emotional reasoning.
To put it simply, narrative charts are a bit like the crash points in chain games: inflation kicks in, studios ramp up activity, prices tend to spiral, and in the end, it's mostly the least liquid people fighting each other.
Next time, I might try exiting earlier (selling small amounts first to see actual slippage),
will you set hard stop-losses in advance, or wait until on-chain signals worsen before running?