Last year, I mentored a student who couldn’t even tell whether a candlestick was up or down.
Three months later, this guy turned 6,000U into 170,000. No hacks, no insider info—just a rigid, almost mechanical strategy.
**Let’s start with fund management.** He split his principal into 60 portions, only risking 100U at a time. Others mocked him for being overly cautious, but he survived to the end. After each win, he’d add to his position based on a fixed formula—never greedy, never timid, just steady like a robot.
**His entry signals were even more unique.** He only watched the one-hour chart: when the 7-day moving average crossed above the 21-day, he’d immediately switch to the four-hour chart to check if the MACD turned red below the zero line. If both conditions were met, he’d go for it. This combo gave him a ridiculously high win rate.
He was ruthless with stop loss and take profit.
The moment he opened a position, he’d set them: lose 1% in the wrong direction? Cut it. Gain 3% in the right direction? Close it. He’d even set an alarm on his phone to close the position at a set time, no matter if it was up or down. Many people lose because they think, “Let’s wait a little longer, maybe I can make more,” but he never gave himself that chance.
**He also took compounding to the extreme.** After the first win, he’d split the principal and profit, putting half into the next trade. If he won again, he’d only risk 2% of total funds on the next one. It seems conservative, but with continuous compounding, the snowball just kept growing.
His final rule was learned the hard way—**a time blacklist**. He never touched the market before or after non-farm payroll data releases, and avoided Friday nights from 8-10 PM, only trading between 1-3 AM. Why? Because those periods are insanely volatile and retail traders get wiped out the fastest.
The whole approach sounds dumb, right? But the market crushes those who think they’re too smart.
Some people go all-in on gut feeling and get liquidated, others chase hot trends and get burned, but this kind of “stupid method” steadily turns small money into big money. The core is just one thing: discipline.
Crypto isn’t a long or short road, but those who laugh last aren’t the luckiest—they’re the ones with the steadiest mindset and the strictest execution.
Can you turn 6,000U into 170,000? The key isn’t how much you start with—it’s whether you can persist with “stupidity” to the extreme.
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NewPumpamentals
· 12-10 00:28
Really, I'm not lying. Just sticking to this one rigid approach lasts much longer than those who are always researching cutting-edge tech.
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DefiPlaybook
· 12-10 00:27
This is the true essence of APY—discipline trumps all flashy arbitrage opportunities.
Damn, the market just loves these kinds of "fools," while those who go all-in the other way end up wiped out.
Turning 6,000U into 170,000, that's even worse than the impermanent loss I suffered in a certain protocol. Hilarious.
Splitting the principal into 60 parts? This guy's risk management is stricter than the smart contracts of some DeFi protocols.
No way, specifically choosing to make moves between 1-3 a.m.—I never thought time arbitrage could be played like this.
This rigid strategy sounds just like a high-APY but low-risk staking pool—just listen, don't actually believe it.
Take-profit and stop-loss are truly lessons written in blood; so many people die waiting for "just a little longer."
A 2% bet size—this is basically the human nature version of compounding yield farming.
Honestly, this story is more reliable than some project's whitepapers.
Human nature—always wanting to go all-in on intuition, never realizing the market has already calculated all the ways retail investors can lose.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-9ad11037
· 12-10 00:13
Seriously, it's exactly this rigid stuff that lasts the longest. It's so ironic, haha.
Last year, I mentored a student who couldn’t even tell whether a candlestick was up or down.
Three months later, this guy turned 6,000U into 170,000. No hacks, no insider info—just a rigid, almost mechanical strategy.
**Let’s start with fund management.** He split his principal into 60 portions, only risking 100U at a time. Others mocked him for being overly cautious, but he survived to the end. After each win, he’d add to his position based on a fixed formula—never greedy, never timid, just steady like a robot.
**His entry signals were even more unique.** He only watched the one-hour chart: when the 7-day moving average crossed above the 21-day, he’d immediately switch to the four-hour chart to check if the MACD turned red below the zero line. If both conditions were met, he’d go for it. This combo gave him a ridiculously high win rate.
He was ruthless with stop loss and take profit.
The moment he opened a position, he’d set them: lose 1% in the wrong direction? Cut it. Gain 3% in the right direction? Close it. He’d even set an alarm on his phone to close the position at a set time, no matter if it was up or down. Many people lose because they think, “Let’s wait a little longer, maybe I can make more,” but he never gave himself that chance.
**He also took compounding to the extreme.**
After the first win, he’d split the principal and profit, putting half into the next trade. If he won again, he’d only risk 2% of total funds on the next one. It seems conservative, but with continuous compounding, the snowball just kept growing.
His final rule was learned the hard way—**a time blacklist**.
He never touched the market before or after non-farm payroll data releases, and avoided Friday nights from 8-10 PM, only trading between 1-3 AM. Why? Because those periods are insanely volatile and retail traders get wiped out the fastest.
The whole approach sounds dumb, right? But the market crushes those who think they’re too smart.
Some people go all-in on gut feeling and get liquidated, others chase hot trends and get burned, but this kind of “stupid method” steadily turns small money into big money. The core is just one thing: discipline.
Crypto isn’t a long or short road, but those who laugh last aren’t the luckiest—they’re the ones with the steadiest mindset and the strictest execution.
Can you turn 6,000U into 170,000? The key isn’t how much you start with—it’s whether you can persist with “stupidity” to the extreme.