#隐私保护话题升温 In the crypto world, from 0 to 10 million, do you really need a card?



Recently, I chatted with a post-90s trading veteran who shared a case—starting with 30,000 yuan and gradually reaching over 80 million. At first glance, it sounds like a fairy tale, but after a deep conversation, I realized his approach is actually very simple, with no fancy tricks.

He said he never chases hot spots or relies on news to gamble. Instead, he sticks to a complete trading system—reviewing, correcting, optimizing, cycle after cycle. In the long run, this is a risk-resistant, reproducible strategy.

How exactly does he operate? He summarized five iron rules:

**Focus is more valuable than anything else.** Choose a set of rules and follow them strictly. Don’t switch from using cycles today to listening to big V’s moving averages tomorrow. Practicing the same move 1,000 times versus 100 times makes a completely different level of execution.

**Certainty > Single big hit.** Not every increase should be chased. Only act when high-probability opportunities appear, relying on compound interest to snowball, rather than expecting to double your holdings in one shot. This mindset makes a big difference.

**Position should be concentrated.** Retail investors often make the mistake of wanting to hold everything. His approach is to keep core holdings to no more than 3, and use the rest to roll over and lower costs. Weigh the importance of focusing firepower versus spreading defenses.

**Combine long-term and short-term cycles.** Use long cycles to observe the overall trend—this is the steering wheel; use short cycles to gauge rhythm and find buy/sell points—this is the accelerator and brake. Many people get the direction right but lose money because they choose the wrong timing; basically, these two layers are not well coordinated.

**Always maintain a student mindset.** No method can be used forever. Every stop-loss is a tuition fee; the key is to learn lessons from it, rather than just comforting oneself.

If the capital is still relatively small, he also gives a four-character advice—fast, accurate, steady, fierce. Fast means decisive profit-taking, don’t watch profits evaporate; accurate means only do what you are confident in; steady means deploying with a good risk-reward ratio; fierce means daring to bet when opportunities come. Sounds simple, but execution is the hardest part.

Ultimately, making money from trading doesn’t rely on luck. It depends on whether you can stick to a system and have a true understanding of the market. The system can be learned, but execution and mindset must be cultivated by oneself.
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UncleWhalevip
· 01-06 07:19
Well said, but the hardest part is maintaining the right mindset. I've seen too many people who know the rules but can't follow through; a single pullback breaks them, and they have to start all over again.
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MetaMaskVictimvip
· 01-05 07:10
Basically, there are no shortcuts; you have to master the fundamentals to the core.
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LiquidationWatchervip
· 01-04 01:36
The system, to put it simply, is just a framework. The key is having someone to execute it... That guy who went from 30,000 to 80 million, I believe he really has some skills, but applying this methodology to everyone? Haha, don't overthink it.
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SandwichDetectorvip
· 01-03 14:50
To be honest, this set of theories sounds reasonable, but few can stick to it in practice. I've seen too many people who talk about focus but hold a bunch of trash coins in their hands. The key is attitude—forget everything after a single loss.
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CafeMinorvip
· 01-03 14:50
Hmm... everything you said is right, but I just want to ask, does this guy still have the money now?
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NotSatoshivip
· 01-03 14:34
The system may sound simple when explained, but when it comes to execution, you'll realize how difficult it truly is. Mindset is the biggest enemy.
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TradFiRefugeevip
· 01-03 14:31
That's right, only someone with a lack of foresight would chase hot trends. I used to be like that too, following the crowd every day. It wasn't until later that I realized that stop-loss is the real moat; everything else is just虚的. Really, focusing on this is easy to say, but each step is more difficult to do. I have an older brother around me who changes rules after a week, and he's still struggling with a loss of 800,000. Being precise, accurate, steady, and ruthless sounds explosive, but when it comes to execution... emmm you'll realize how inexperienced you are, especially with that "precise" word—there are so few opportunities you can confidently seize that it’s almost hopeless. Not bragging about over 80 million, but if this guy really could make that much money, why is he still rambling about system theory? Wouldn't he have quietly made a fortune long ago? I find it hard to believe. The system can be learned for real, but execution... that really takes the skills built up through losses.
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ILCollectorvip
· 01-03 14:28
This theory sounds very correct, but frankly, most people simply can't do it... Especially the "focus" part, I haven't seen many retail investors truly stick with it. Basically, it's a mindset issue. Even the best system collapses the moment losses occur.
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