People often sigh: With only this much money, is there still a chance to turn things around?



To be honest, if the crypto world only relied on the principal, ordinary people would have no chance at all.

Small funds themselves are not the problem; how you use them is the real issue.

I've seen too many people with just a hundred or so dollars in their accounts go all-in right away, wanting to gamble on a quick surge. The thrill sounds exciting, but it's no different from rolling dice. If the direction is wrong, they might not even qualify for the next round.

One friend of mine is like that. He started with just a hundred U.S. dollars, daily hoping for a big move, but chasing high often results in being caught in a trap, or constantly cutting losses, tossing around, and his account gradually shrinks.

Later, I suggested he change his approach: don't gamble, don't rush, try "slow rolling."

The logic is simple—each round only aims for small profits, like thirty or fifty dollars. The key is whether you can keep making money consistently.

His plan was like this: first, grow the account from 100U to 160U; second, push it over 200U; by the third round, he starts taking half of the profits off the table, and the rest continues to roll.

At first, he thought this pace was too slow, but as the curve stabilized and his mindset followed suit, he became more comfortable and found it easier to operate.

Rolling positions is never about speed; it's about controllability.

With a light position, mistakes aren't fatal; with a steady rhythm, opportunities will naturally come.

I do the same myself—main position for stability, secondary position for rolling, taking profits when earned, never chasing explosive gains or trying to guess tops and bottoms.

If the account can survive, the money can slowly grow. This logic is as simple as that.

Having a small principal isn't scary; reckless behavior is the real killer. Taking it slow and repeating the right actions is much more reliable than fantasizing about doubling your money every day.
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FUD_Vaccinatedvip
· 3h ago
There's nothing wrong with that, just afraid people won't listen. The group of people who go all-in every day have already turned into frozen corpses.
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MEVictimvip
· 6h ago
That's so true; I'm just worried that some people might not listen.
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AirdropSkepticvip
· 01-08 04:59
Honestly, those who go all-in usually end up with a bad ending. I've seen too many.
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HodlOrRegretvip
· 01-08 04:57
That's right, going all-in is just courting death. I've seen too many accounts get wiped out.
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SandwichTradervip
· 01-08 04:49
Slow rolling is really much more comfortable than all-in; only with a steady mindset can you last longer.
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RugPullAlertBotvip
· 01-08 04:40
That's right, going all-in is really just courting death.
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