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The game rules of the crypto circle are actually very simple: everything you earn is someone else's money, and all your losses are the source of others' profits.
Many people hype up Bitcoin, $ETH, $SOL, and other things—talking about technological revolutions, financial democratization, and future financial infrastructure. In plain terms, all of these are just packaging. The true underlying logic is only two words: plunder.
The crypto world is not a cooperative game; it is a life-and-death competition. Your profit is someone else's loss endpoint. This is not motivational talk; it is the iron law of the market.
Here's a very realistic example:
You have 300U in your account, and you bet 50U on a long position. If your judgment is correct, you think to yourself, "I'm pretty smart." Meanwhile, another big player, with an account sitting on 100,000U, also bets 50U on a long position at the same time.
Then, the market triggers a pulse—maybe just a tiny needle.
You? Liquidated and out.
Him? Completely unharmed.
Your game ends here, but his game is just beginning to heat up.
This is the difference. You are making the same judgment and executing in the same direction. But in this market, you are the prey, and he is the predator. The difference between life and death is not in analytical ability but in resilience and ammunition reserves.
Retail traders often think they are "following the trend." In reality, your true identity is very humble: a liquidity supply station.
You excitedly rush in to buy the dip, while big players are just waiting for the right moment to offload. You panic and cut your losses to escape, while the big players have already set up ambushes to add positions. Your fear and greed are the most stable cash machines for others.
The market is never a casino. At least in a casino, there is a probability of equality. Here, it is an absolute arena—brutal to the point of having no mercy.