Recently, I was playing with $CYS, $ZKP, and $RAVE in the trading competition, and I ended up screwing myself over.
My original plan was to reach 250,000 and then stop, and I only spent 40,000 on $GUA. But after looking at the predictions from those big V accounts in the plaza—talking about target prices of 500,000, 600,000—I couldn’t sit still. So I decided to add another 200,000 and keep going, finally stopping when $GUA hit 57,000. All this operation cost me an extra 30-something bucks in vain.
Looking back now, where did the problem lie? Honestly, those flashy predictions in the plaza make it hard to tell what's real. Sometimes you just can’t figure out whether it’s a true expert’s analysis or the project team trying to boost their presence. Following the trend and chasing high always ends up hurting retail investors like us. The lesson from this was quite profound.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ChainSauceMaster
· 01-07 05:45
Another day of being fooled by influencers, those predictions in the square are really outrageous.
View OriginalReply0
JustAnotherWallet
· 01-07 05:42
Trust me, don't believe these prediction guys, it's all nonsense.
View OriginalReply0
PerennialLeek
· 01-07 05:34
Big influencers' talk is really something else - they hype up 500k, 600k so smoothly, but the moment you follow along you get trapped in a bag.
View OriginalReply0
SignatureCollector
· 01-07 05:30
It sounds like it's just the crowd at the square leading the rhythm. Honestly, this kind of thing happens all the time.
Recently, I was playing with $CYS, $ZKP, and $RAVE in the trading competition, and I ended up screwing myself over.
My original plan was to reach 250,000 and then stop, and I only spent 40,000 on $GUA. But after looking at the predictions from those big V accounts in the plaza—talking about target prices of 500,000, 600,000—I couldn’t sit still. So I decided to add another 200,000 and keep going, finally stopping when $GUA hit 57,000. All this operation cost me an extra 30-something bucks in vain.
Looking back now, where did the problem lie? Honestly, those flashy predictions in the plaza make it hard to tell what's real. Sometimes you just can’t figure out whether it’s a true expert’s analysis or the project team trying to boost their presence. Following the trend and chasing high always ends up hurting retail investors like us. The lesson from this was quite profound.