Suppose you only have 1,000 yuan. How should you play? Someone has proposed a "three-step" plan:
Step 1: Find a coin expected to increase 100 times and invest in it, turning 1,000 into 100,000. Sounds great, right?
Step 2: Use that 100,000 to chase a 50x opportunity, turning the account into 5 million.
Step 3: Multiply the 5 million by 20 times... Ding ding ding, on paper, it becomes 100 million.
Logically, there's nothing wrong with this, and the math checks out, but that's the problem—it's purely a paper game.
In reality, hitting three coins simultaneously with 100x, 50x, and 20x returns is so unlikely it would make you laugh. Plus, each step requires perfect take-profit and stop-loss execution. How strong must your psychological resilience be? Add market sentiment, liquidity, and timing windows—any slip-up in any link means you have to give back all previous gains.
Interestingly, this theory actually holds when looking at the development of the entire crypto market—early Bitcoin holders did experience such exponential growth, and the Ethereum ecosystem has also seen similar stories. The question is, can you guarantee that you are the one choosing the right direction?
Rather than dreaming of perfect three-time relay, think clearly: do you want to rely on luck to get rich overnight, or do you want to steadily accumulate through risk management and long-term allocation? These two paths are entirely different games, and the results are often worlds apart.
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BlockchainBrokenPromise
· 6h ago
Haha, isn't this the dream plan my old buddy told me about two years ago? We're still recovering from it now.
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FlashLoanPhantom
· 6h ago
Basically, it's just a gambler's mentality disguised as an investment theory. I've seen plenty of it.
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ProposalManiac
· 7h ago
This is a classic case of incentive imbalance, treating probabilistic risks as certain gains in design... A perfect three-step take-profit and stop-loss? Haha, that requires a very strong self-discipline mechanism.
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GasFeeBarbecue
· 7h ago
Basically, it's the gambler's mentality—100x, 50x, 20x multipliers, after a single chain, it's time to burn incense, haha.
Suppose you only have 1,000 yuan. How should you play? Someone has proposed a "three-step" plan:
Step 1: Find a coin expected to increase 100 times and invest in it, turning 1,000 into 100,000. Sounds great, right?
Step 2: Use that 100,000 to chase a 50x opportunity, turning the account into 5 million.
Step 3: Multiply the 5 million by 20 times... Ding ding ding, on paper, it becomes 100 million.
Logically, there's nothing wrong with this, and the math checks out, but that's the problem—it's purely a paper game.
In reality, hitting three coins simultaneously with 100x, 50x, and 20x returns is so unlikely it would make you laugh. Plus, each step requires perfect take-profit and stop-loss execution. How strong must your psychological resilience be? Add market sentiment, liquidity, and timing windows—any slip-up in any link means you have to give back all previous gains.
Interestingly, this theory actually holds when looking at the development of the entire crypto market—early Bitcoin holders did experience such exponential growth, and the Ethereum ecosystem has also seen similar stories. The question is, can you guarantee that you are the one choosing the right direction?
Rather than dreaming of perfect three-time relay, think clearly: do you want to rely on luck to get rich overnight, or do you want to steadily accumulate through risk management and long-term allocation? These two paths are entirely different games, and the results are often worlds apart.