Living is victory.



I started with a capital of 3000U, experienced sleepless nights during margin calls, and also felt the thrill of doubling my investment. Up to today, my deepest realization is one sentence: Making money in the crypto world doesn’t rely on complex techniques, but on not being foolish. If you truly only have 1200U, as long as you follow these three rules, turning 50,000U into reality is just a matter of time.

**Rule 1: Treat your money as seeds, not bullets**

What are small funds most afraid of? One decision leading to total loss. Many jump in and go all-in, ending up with wiped-out principal and no chips left to recover. My approach is completely opposite — divide 1200U into three parts, each independent:

First part 400U dedicated to intraday trading: focus on BTC and ETH, make at most two trades per day, take profit at 5%, and never be greedy.

Second part 400U for swing trading: look at weekly charts, wait until the price shows a clear bullish pattern with volume confirmation before acting. Like SOL’s breakout from $25, once the trend is confirmed, chasing it captures the most stable part of the main upward wave.

Third part 400U kept in reserve: no matter how crazy the market gets, don’t touch it. Keep it for two purposes — to add positions if caught in a dip, or to pick up bargains during market crashes.

The core logic of this division is simple: the primary task for small funds is to survive, not to gamble for a turnaround. Dividing positions is essentially risk management, ensuring each loss isn’t fatal.

**Rule 2: Only eat the trend’s meat, don’t waste effort in consolidation**

70% of the market time is sideways trading. Frequent trading during this period just pays unnecessary fees to the exchange. The real opportunity for retail investors lies in the trend — once the direction is clear, entering the market is a hundred times more reliable than flipping back and forth in sideways moves.

I judge the trend with two signals: price and volume. When you see the price hitting new highs along with increasing volume, that’s the best time to follow in — maximum safety. Conversely, if the price rises but volume remains weak, avoid the false breakout.

**Rule 3: Stop-loss is as important as eating**

Even the best traders can be wrong sometimes. The difference is, traders who survive strictly implement stop-losses, while those who fail always think “it will rebound.” Set your stop-loss levels properly; when it hits, get out. Don’t ask why — execution is the real weapon for survival.

Ultimately, the crypto world is a survival game. Those who can control risk, protect their principal, and wait for the right opportunity will be the ones who laugh last.
BTC-1,39%
ETH-3%
SOL-2,08%
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TokenStormvip
· 34m ago
Position splitting sounds good, but I'm worried that FOMO will wipe everything out during execution. I'm a bit skeptical about the backtest data of this strategy... Wait, I really can't do stop-loss. Every time the price drops to a certain point, I think about waiting a bit longer, and as a result, I never wait enough. Turning 1200U into 50,000 sounds simple, but the probability of that happening is probably harder than my judgment of the price-volume match once, right? Honestly, the cold storage trick is indeed clever. Having ammunition during market crashes is essential to survive... but I often move my cold storage for other uses in advance. From a technical perspective, these three rules are fine, but I can't get past human nature. How about you?
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MerkleDreamervip
· 7h ago
Sounds good, but it's easier to say than to do.
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SatoshiChallengervip
· 01-04 23:50
Data shows that 99% of people who say this are losing money after half a year. Interestingly, splitting 1200U into three parts sounds like risk control, but in reality, it's just three bets. Ironically, the phrase "Surviving is victory" itself proves that most people can't make it.
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CryptoSourGrapevip
· 01-04 23:46
If only I had this realization back then, now it's too late to say I won't be foolish anymore.
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MainnetDelayedAgainvip
· 01-04 23:40
According to the database, this split-position theory has been circulating since 2020, with validation delayed n times... patiently waiting for the bloom.
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AirdropChaservip
· 01-04 23:39
Positioning is indeed the hard truth; those who avoid all-in tend to live much longer than the ones who go all-in.
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OffchainOraclevip
· 01-04 23:38
The theory of position splitting sounds good, but how many people can truly stick to it? Most people are still greedy.
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OfflineValidatorvip
· 01-04 23:26
The split position strategy is truly excellent, much longer-lasting than those guys who go all-in at once. There's nothing wrong with what this article says; the core message is to avoid greed—being alive is the real win. The execution of stop-loss orders is spot on; so many people get wiped out by the phrase "wait for a rebound." Using volume and price to judge the trend is a well-known principle, but few people actually do it well. 1200 to 50,000? It depends on luck, but the framework is indeed solid.
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DAOdreamervip
· 01-04 23:22
That's right, stop-loss is truly a matter of life and death. I once lost a lot of money because I couldn't bear to cut my losses.
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