Having been active in the crypto market for over 7 years, I have made money and lost money. Today, I am整理ing the lessons learned from those hard-earned gains. If you've been trading crypto for half a year without making any progress, these tips can help you avoid many detours.



Let's start with the 10 most critical survival rules:

**Capital management is key**. Keep your principal under 20,000 and never fully leverage. The market requires patience; only those who can wait will survive until the end. Catching one major upward wave a year is enough to sustain you.

**Maintain your cognitive boundaries**. Always practice on a demo account before trading live. Demo accounts allow unlimited trial and error, while a single fatal mistake in real trading could mean the end.

**Be cautious of profit realization**. If a major positive news event occurs and you don't act on the same day, sell at the next day's open if it gaps up. Many people have fallen into this trap.

**Holidays carry high risks**. Historical data shows that reducing or even closing positions before holidays is wise—this is not alarmist talk.

**Keep cash for medium to long-term**. Always reserve some bullets; selling high and buying low is the way to go. The idea of "going all in" is just a hype created by market makers.

**Focus on active coins for short-term trading**. Trading low-volume, low-volatility assets is a waste of time and can damage your mindset.

**Watch the rhythm of declines**. Slow, prolonged declines can be exhausting, whereas sharp drops often rebound quickly. Timing the moves well can save you a lot of losses.

**Stop-loss is the survival bottom line**. Cut losses immediately when wrong; as long as your principal remains, there's still a chance to turn things around.

**Use 15-minute K-line charts for short-term trading**. Combine with the KDJ indicator; the best buy and sell points are here, much more effective than blindly watching the market.

**Technical skills should be refined, not numerous**. Instead of learning a bunch of flashy techniques, master 1-2 methods to perfection.

Each of these rules is based on real combat experience. Avoiding detours essentially means making money. When the Fed cuts rates or altcoin season is approaching, stay humble and respectful. Want to survive in the crypto market? Never relax any of these bottom lines.
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SchrodingerPrivateKeyvip
· 6h ago
Everyone who was fully invested has been wiped out, and that's no exaggeration. I was also greedy before, and as a result, I was wiped out in a sudden crash. Now I'm just holding some bullets, waiting for an opportunity.
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LiquidatedTwicevip
· 6h ago
That stop-loss really hit hard. I saw too many people hold on stubbornly last year. It would have been enough to set a 5-point stop-loss, but they only realized it after liquidation.
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RugPullAlarmvip
· 6h ago
After looking for a while, the key is still to monitor on-chain data. This guy's talk about stop-loss and capital management is correct, but I'm more concerned about—how do you know that there aren't large addresses quietly selling off behind the tokens you bought? 15-minute K-line with KDJ? Come on, first check the contract audit report. Honestly, the lessons I've learned tell me that technical analysis is all smoke and mirrors; capital concentration is the real key. Good news being realized and not moving? It might actually surge upward. I would directly check the flow of suspicious addresses on-chain, and nine times out of ten, it's the last scam before the whales start accumulating. Capital management will always be the top priority, I agree to the core. But just protecting the principal isn't enough; you need to know exactly whose wallet your money is flowing into. Otherwise, whether you're fully invested or completely out, you're just contributing to the pump-and-dump scheme. The copycat season is coming, and we need to be extra cautious. There will be warnings of exit scams one after another. Instead of studying KDJ buy/sell signals, it's better to develop a pair of eyes that can see through contract risks—it's more peace of mind.
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MidnightSnapHuntervip
· 6h ago
The most heartbreaking stop-loss is the one where many people just refuse to cut losses, and end up going completely to zero. I've seen too many stories like that. I've also fallen into the trap of full position before, and almost couldn't recover that time. Now I only focus on active coins; I can't afford to waste time on trash coins. When there's good news, just sell immediately instead of holding. This is really the ultimate strategy. So many times I chased highs, only to be stunned at the open the next day. Holding cash during holidays is a good suggestion, although sometimes you might miss out, but staying alive is more important than making money. The simulated trading practice is a must-read for beginners. One mistake in real trading can set you back to square one, so it's safer to practice more. Using KDJ with a 15-minute chart sounds simple but really effective. Avoiding complicated stuff often leads to more profit, it's interesting. Maintaining cognitive boundaries is the hardest because you always think you know everything. Now I only trade active coins; even if I like other coins, I don't touch them. The idea of saving bullets changed my trading approach—greed is the biggest enemy.
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BlockchainFoodievip
· 6h ago
honestly this reads like a farm-to-fork supply chain for your portfolio... you're basically saying practice your recipe in the test kitchen before serving it to paying customers, yeah? the "patience beats greed" part hits different tho — it's like knowing when to let your sourdough proof vs rushing it. most people are out here trying to bake at 500°C when 450° would've done the job perfectly fine.
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SandwichTradervip
· 6h ago
Those who are fully invested are all martyrs; this is no exaggeration. I lost everything early on, and I only survived until today because I learned to save my bullets.
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