People with less than 1,000U in their accounts love two things most: researching 100x coins and dreaming of getting rich overnight.



Unfortunately, these two things are also the fastest ways to zero out your account.

Holding a few hundred U while watching others post their doubled gains—itchy? Yes. But you have to understand: what they show are winning trades. The losers? You never see them.

Too many people with 500U want to make 5,000U; with 1,000U they want 100kU.

Switching coins every day, chasing hot narratives—until the principal is gone first. The biggest advantage of a small account is that you can afford to lose.

The smaller your account, the more you should cherish every bullet you have.

Don't go full position, don't all-in, and never gamble with living expenses. Split 1,000U into five parts, 200U each—lose once and you still have four more shots. One all-in, and if you lose, you won't even have a place to cry.

Also, don't always think the next coin will change your life. Many people don't even know what a project does, yet they jump in because someone shilled it in a group, only to find out they were the exit liquidity.

The most important thing for small capital to practice is not skill—it's discipline. Control your position, learn to cut losses, and keep your hands in check. It may sound boring, but it matters far more than catching a 100x coin.

One more thing: stop obsessing over doubling your money. Survive first—nothing matters more. As long as your account is still alive, there will always be opportunities. Once your principal is gone, the best opportunity in the world has nothing to do with you.

If you have less than 1,000U right now, first learn to wait, learn to follow the rules. Accumulate experience and capital slowly. Don't rush to gamble your life with a small account. Time is your biggest advantage.
#预测世界杯西班牙VS比利时
#GateUS合规扩展佛罗里达
#美股AI概念股普涨
View Original
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.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pinned