ZeGeEth

vip
Futures Trading Strategist
Market Analyst
Crypto Market Researcher
Repeatedly helping fans recover and grow their holdings, 100k USDT is just the starting point for me. Slow is fast, and the strategy focuses on stability.
That year, with 10 thousand of principal, no one thought I could turn things around.
I kept losing 7 trades in a row, and the account was left with only 6 thousand. In the early hours of that day, I stared at the candlestick chart for a long time, asking myself: should I keep going? In the end, I still rewrote my rules and started over. Six months later, my account reached 1.5 million. Looking back, what truly turned me around wasn’t some miracle move, but six trading disciplines I kept executing all the time. $OPN
First, if a rally rises fast and falls slowly, it is often not the top. After
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If you’ve decided to trade crypto for the rest of your life, and you hope that one day you can trade crypto to support your family! Then please remember the 10 iron rules below—there isn’t much content, but every sentence is pure gold!
For strong coins: as long as after a high-level dip they fall for 9 consecutive days, you must promptly follow up. #币圈暴富
2. For any coin: as long as it has risen for 2 consecutive days, you must promptly reduce your position. #币圈生存法则
For any coin: if it has surged more than 7% and on the next day there’s still a chance to push higher, you can continue to wait
SKL-8.62%
MEGA0.52%
CHIP-3.29%
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Last night, a little after 2 a.m., a brother sent me a voice message. His voice was already a bit off.
He said he had $8,000 in principal, went long with 30x leverage, and when the market pulled back by a few percentage points, the account was gone immediately. He asked me what exactly went wrong.
I went through his records—actually, one sentence can explain it all:
Over $7,000, and he went all-in in one shot. A stop-loss? Doesn’t exist.
In plain terms, this kind of trade isn’t trading—it’s gambling for your life.
A lot of people keep getting one thing wrong: they think liquidation is the faul
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XuShenfan:
That’s absolutely right—many people treat leverage as the enemy; in fact, the real enemy is their own inability to control their hands.
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In the crypto world, going from 10k to 10 million sounds like a myth to many people at first. $LAB
But if you break it down, the logic isn’t that complicated—it's just catching a few major moves and holding through them.
It’s not that you have to make money every day; it’s whether you can hold on longer during those key waves.
Most people’s problem is never that they don’t have opportunities—it’s that when opportunities come, they can’t hold on.
Up a little and you run, down a little and you panic—so in the end you only nibble the skin of every trend.
This path, when broken down, is basically
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L2ArbitrageTrader:
The last line hit hard: “I don’t dare to go all-in, and I don’t dare to hold”—that’s exactly me.
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Many people who just entered the crypto circle have a misconception: since the principal is small, you need to go all-in and work hard, quickly turn things around.
But let me tell you the truth—when the principal is smaller, you can’t act recklessly.
I guided a follower who started with about 7,000 USDT—basically just testing the waters. But he didn’t rush. Instead, he followed a very simple rhythm and slowly executed it step by step. Later, after about half a year, he rolled it up to nearly 300k USDT, and he’s still moving upward.
There’s nothing magical about the whole process—just a few bas
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NeonMargin:
Small-capital slow compounding is the real skill. Earning 300K USDT in half a year sounds outrageous, but the logic holds. Position management and emotional control are far harder than chasing a 100x coin.
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In crypto, the longer you stay, the more you get this feeling—say it out loud and a lot of people probably won’t like it:
The more you complicate trading, the more likely you are to get harvested by the market in the end.
It’s not that the technology isn’t good. It’s that you think too much, do too much, and finally wind yourself up in a knot.
Looking back on my own journey—from tens of thousands of U to an eight-figure number—there’s nothing mystical about it, and no “secret metrics.”
The core is just one thing: cut the complex stuff, and only keep actions you can execute repeatedly.
When you
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FragilePosition:
The 20-day moving average plus the “death rule” — to execute it for three years takes rare talent; $LAB followed this run.
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A man who trades crypto for a living—how can he return to normal life? Honestly, it’s hard.
I have a friend. When he first entered the crypto circle, he was pretty ordinary. He just tried trading futures. Then, with a bit of luck, in two days, he turned $1,500 of principal into $40k. $LAB
In that moment, he was totally floating—no exaggeration. He truly believed he’d found a “wealth password.”
But the problem started from then on.
Later, because of heavy positioning, going all-in, and holding through losses, the $40k slowly slid back to a few hundred. He should’ve stopped, but he couldn’t any
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GateUser-de0b9e3b:
Smart contracts are basically “electronic heroin.” My friend is still standing in line on the rooftop right now.
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小资金在币圈,先学会活着。
Many people with small capital in the crypto market should first learn how to survive.
A lot of people come in with 1000U in their pocket, and their brains are fixed on one thing: turn it tenfold, turn it twentyfold. Chasing hot spots, frequently switching positions, going all-in—after busying for a few months, when they look back, the principal hasn’t grown; instead, they’ve shrunk a圈.
$LAB
Not long ago, a follower reached out to chat with me. His account had 1200U. In a single day, he could open a dozen or so trades—he had every step of chasing pumps and dumping, pulled to the
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TransparentDomeCity:
Position management is indeed the first lesson for small capital—survive first, and only then will you have the chance to see the power of compounding.
When your account only has 2,000 USDT left, the most dangerous thing isn’t bad technical skills, nor a rough market—it’s the only three words in your head: “Quick, get back your position.” $LAB
Earlier, I had a follower who entered with 2,500 USDT. In three months, he traded more than twenty different coins, also messed around with a few contracts, and watched the charts every day until 2 or 3 a.m. What happened in the end? His account was left with 1,200 USDT. He was busy all day, but the more he rushed, the less money he had. I went through his transaction history, and the conclusion is ver
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MarginMarmot:
Staying at 2,000 U is stronger than anything else—slow is fast.
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Making money from trading crypto and ending up with a few million—many people’s first reaction isn’t joy, it’s panic: they’re afraid of being asked, “Where did this money come from?” #出金
In fact, most of the risk has nothing to do with earning money itself; it’s about how you convert it into RMB and how you get it onto your bank card. If USDT is sitting in your account, as long as you don’t convert it into fiat, basically nobody will bother you, and there’s no talk of anything illegal. $TAC
The situations that can really go wrong are basically two: one is that you’re in a rush and dump every
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Cross-SectionOfSucculent:
I’ve seen too many people make a fortune in the bull market and get carried away—when withdrawing funds, they greedily chase a 0.5% price spread and end up with their card frozen, going straight to zero.
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When your account is under 2000 USD, stop thinking about turning it tenfold every day. $LAB
Let me say something a bit harsh: the biggest enemy of small funds is never the market—it’s that mindset of “betting everything on a comeback.”
Not long ago, one of my followers had an account of only 1400 USD. He chased pumps and dumped at the top every day like it was war, opening more than a dozen trades in a day. What happened? The more he traded, the more he lost, and he was exhausted too. Later, I had him change three habits. Within a few months, his account really did slowly grow to more than 30
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ZhouYuYa:
🤣
Stop dreaming about a 100x coin.
Brother Xia took 5 months to turn an account with less than 3,000 USDT into 98k USDT.
It’s not about going all-in, and it’s not luck—it's about compounding with a steady 3% every day.
Yes, you read that right. This is the real money-printing machine that’s actually suitable for ordinary people.
I, Brother Xia, was also a professional liquidator once—I lost so much that I wanted to quit the scene.
Later, after a painful lesson, I made one change: split the account into two halves.
Half is locked in a cold wallet—nobody touches it. That’s my capital moat.
The oth
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Brother Ze discovered that many people in the crypto circle watch the accounts and obsess over how much they’re up every day, yet they ignore a more realistic question: can the money actually be safely turned into your money.
To put it plainly, making money is just the process; only when you can withdraw smoothly and have it land in your pocket does a trade truly end.
I’ve seen too many examples: an account gets to tens of thousands or even over a million USDT, but it gets stuck at the withdrawal stage. After risk controls and freezes get worked over, the amount you ultimately receive shrinks
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GateUser-57ab9c02:
When I first got into the crypto scene, I didn’t really understand things. I used my salary card directly for deposits and withdrawals, and I almost got a call from the bank to ask me about it.
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Many people don't believe that 7,000 yuan can grow to 1 million.
Ze Ge doesn't serve chicken soup; I've actually walked this path. Back then, I only had 7,000 yuan in my pocket, gritted my teeth and exchanged it all into 1,000U — that moment was a last stand. But I didn't go crazy, nor did I go all-in — I only took 200U to test the waters, focusing only on the hottest, most emotionally charged coin of the day. I would double up and leave, and if it dropped to 50U, I would cut immediately, without hesitation. After several consecutive times riding the rhythm, my principal surged like it was on
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GateUser-14cb5f72:
This trick of writing take-profit and stop-loss on paper—I learned it now. My phone’s notes are full of just these two numbers.
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He asked Brother Ze if he could turn things around with 20k U. Half a year later, his account had an extra 150k.
At the end of last year, a brother came to me, saying his account had only 20k U left, asking if there was still hope.
I reviewed his trading records and told him directly: It's not that you don't have enough money, it's that your rhythm is completely off.
Later, I had him only do three types of rhythm trades—stop loss locked in, heavy positions only at key levels.
Phase one went from 46k U to 97k U, and by the end of May, the account settled at 153k U.
It wasn't luck—it was rhythm
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AirdropTaxPanic:
Now it’s all filled with screenshots of “proof of trades.” Not many have the guts to openly share their transaction records and inner thoughts. Uncle Ze’s post really…
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Guys, want to know how to turn 28k into 1.68 million?
Let me be clear: this result doesn't come from luck or trading every day. The essence is just one sentence: only take a few key opportunities, and spend the rest of the time waiting.
Many people don't make big money not because they can't trade, but because they trade too much.
When the market is good, they dare not go all in. When the market is chaotic, they can't resist jumping in. The result is being repeatedly whipsawed by the market.
The logic for those who truly succeed is actually very simple—just three things.
First, wait for opport
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SatsumaSignal:
I finally got this lesson after three years of realization; now it’s just a dead wait—if the signal doesn’t come, I won’t make a move.
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Small funds always lose? Most of the time it's not that you can't, but that you're too impatient.
Brother Xia has seen too many small-fund players with only 1000U in their accounts, yet they stare at those crazy coins that surge dozens of points in a day.
$ETH
asked him why, and he said: 'With little principal, how can I turn things around without taking a gamble?'
And the result? $YFI
chased a few hot spots, the position got heavier, and in the end, the principal didn't turn over, but the account disappeared first.
Think carefully: even if you double 1000U, it's only 2000U.
But for that dou
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AccountantsAlsoGetInto:
When I first got into the scene, I also used to FOMO into “scam coins” every day. Now I understand that in crypto, living longer matters far more than making money faster—by ten thousand times.
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Simplified trading rules, specially tailored for accounts under $10k. $CHIP
Brothers with only a few thousand or a few hundred USD—listen to Brother Ze: stop obsessing over get-rich-quick lies.
The crypto market punishes impatience and greed. The more small funds chase trends and overtrade, the faster they die.
But the market never lacks turnaround opportunities. Many people I know started with tiny capital and steadily rolled it into seven figures using the simplest, most basic method. Not exciting, not flashy—but it lets you survive in the market long-term and keep making money.
Step one: on
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TheGiantWhaleInTheReflection:
MACD golden cross + the 20-day moving average—this combination is indeed classic, but there aren’t many people who can actually cut when it breaks down; the hardest part is human nature.
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Many people treat futures trading as a "game of luck," but those who truly survive have usually paid tuition more than once.
Bro Cat started out the same way—after a few winning trades, he thought he had it figured out, even began adding leverage and increasing position size. At that point, it wasn't trading; it was gambling. Until one time the market moved against him and his account was wiped out completely. That moment he realized: it wasn't the market being harsh, it was himself being too careless.
Only later did he gradually come to understand that the essence of futures trading isn't abo
GUSD-0.01%
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VolcanicMonolith:
Brother Cat, this experience is too real. I also got liquidated twice before I learned to set stop-losses. Now I’d rather make less money than go all-in with a heavy position—staying alive is how you still get to keep producing.
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