I used to be that trader who was glued to the 1-minute candlestick chart, panicking over every small fluctuation, afraid of missing out on tiny movements. It wasn't until later that I realized the true logic of making money isn't about catching every small rebound, but about understanding the rhythm across different timeframes. Gradually, I developed a multi-cycle linkage approach, finally breaking free from the curse of "buying high and selling low."
This method actually involves three interconnected steps, progressing layer by layer:
**First Layer: Look at the Big Picture (4-hour cycle)**
The 4-hour timeframe is sufficient to effectively filter out market noise and see the true trend direction clearly. This step answers only one core question: should I buy now or sell short?
In an uptrend, each new high is higher than the previous one, and each new low is also higher—focusing solely on long opportunities and decisively avoiding shorts. Conversely, in a downtrend, each high is lower than the previous, and lows are descending—operate in the opposite direction. For sideways consolidation with no clear pattern, the smartest choice is to stay put.
Iron law: Never bet on small-cycle rebounds against the 4-hour trend.
**Second Layer: Positioning (1-hour cycle)**
Once the trend is clear, identify key support and resistance levels on the 1-hour chart—these are potential entry zones.
When going long, pay attention to previous lows, trendlines, and moving average supports (like EMA60). When shorting, look at previous highs, downward trendlines, and accumulation zones. At this stage, there's no need for pinpoint accuracy; drawing a meaningful "price range" is enough.
**Third Layer: Wait for Signals (15-minute cycle)**
This is the moment to act. Only when the conditions from the previous two steps are met do you use the 15-minute chart to capture specific entry signals. Don't try to grab stars in the sky—be prepared and strategic.
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JustHodlIt
· 01-10 06:00
Sounds good, but I still think most people simply can't do these three steps... Just waiting for signals alone can wear out a lot of people.
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ForkMonger
· 01-08 17:01
nah this multi-timeframe thing is just governance theater dressed up as trading wisdom... real protocol vulnerability lives between the cracks of what your 4h chart can't see. everyone's preaching the same risk management sermon while the actual edge is in timing the fork before the masses even know there's a schism brewing.
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LidoStakeAddict
· 01-08 08:49
Honestly, bro, I tried this method half a year ago too, and it’s definitely much more comfortable than messing around with one-minute charts.
I'm still exploring multi-timeframe resonance. Setting the direction on the 4-hour chart is no problem, but when it comes to the 1-hour chart, I always want to jump in early... Sometimes, even when I get the direction right, I end up losing on the details. How do you overcome this?
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SelfRugger
· 01-08 08:47
That's right, only by slowing down like this can you live longer. I used to watch the K-line in seconds, but the more I watched, the more I lost.
Multi-timeframe resonance is truly the best, but executing it requires a firm resolve to stay still, which is the hardest part.
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OnChainDetective
· 01-08 08:47
nah wait, so you're saying the real edge is just... not chasing every single candle wick? traced through like 50 rugpulls and this timeframe layering thing actually holds up statistically 👀
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BagHolderTillRetire
· 01-08 08:43
It's easy to say, but the key is to stay calm. That's how I operate, yet I still frequently hit stop-loss. I feel the problem isn't the cycle but my own greed.
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BlockchainBouncer
· 01-08 08:29
This multi-cycle framework sounds good, but the problem is that most people can't actually execute it. A wave of pullback can cause a mental breakdown.
Bro, it's easy to say "never bet against the trend for a rebound," but in reality, resisting the urge to act is really difficult.
I used to be that trader who was glued to the 1-minute candlestick chart, panicking over every small fluctuation, afraid of missing out on tiny movements. It wasn't until later that I realized the true logic of making money isn't about catching every small rebound, but about understanding the rhythm across different timeframes. Gradually, I developed a multi-cycle linkage approach, finally breaking free from the curse of "buying high and selling low."
This method actually involves three interconnected steps, progressing layer by layer:
**First Layer: Look at the Big Picture (4-hour cycle)**
The 4-hour timeframe is sufficient to effectively filter out market noise and see the true trend direction clearly. This step answers only one core question: should I buy now or sell short?
In an uptrend, each new high is higher than the previous one, and each new low is also higher—focusing solely on long opportunities and decisively avoiding shorts. Conversely, in a downtrend, each high is lower than the previous, and lows are descending—operate in the opposite direction. For sideways consolidation with no clear pattern, the smartest choice is to stay put.
Iron law: Never bet on small-cycle rebounds against the 4-hour trend.
**Second Layer: Positioning (1-hour cycle)**
Once the trend is clear, identify key support and resistance levels on the 1-hour chart—these are potential entry zones.
When going long, pay attention to previous lows, trendlines, and moving average supports (like EMA60). When shorting, look at previous highs, downward trendlines, and accumulation zones. At this stage, there's no need for pinpoint accuracy; drawing a meaningful "price range" is enough.
**Third Layer: Wait for Signals (15-minute cycle)**
This is the moment to act. Only when the conditions from the previous two steps are met do you use the 15-minute chart to capture specific entry signals. Don't try to grab stars in the sky—be prepared and strategic.