#密码资产动态追踪 From $800U to $3,800U, the account nearly quintupled in half a month—this is not a story of being chosen by fate, but a true reflection of an ordinary worker using a systematic approach to grasp the market rhythm.



Many people get dizzy watching candlestick charts, yet their accounts still decline steadily. The problem isn't knowledge, but the lack of a replicable, executable trading framework. Today, let's break down how this "Three-Level Progressive Method" actually grows small funds into large ones.

**First Level: Precise Low-Buy, Heavy Hands Upon Confirmation**

Don't chase rallies, don't gamble on emotions—that's basic discipline. The key is how to identify genuine mispricing opportunities among numerous lows—many can't do this because their psychological defenses are too fragile.

When the target drops, first use 5% of your position to test the bottom. This isn't small play; it's about accumulating market information. Once a bullish signal confirms (volume, support levels, technical indicators all point to it), then go all-in with 30%. This isn't about catching a rebound but about capturing the core lift of the main force—where profits are the fattest.

$BREV has experienced such a move before. Those who pre-positioned profited far more from the rebound at the lowest point than latecomers following the trend.

**Second Level: Position Rotation, Gradually Harvest Profits**

Divide your funds into three parts: catching the main upward wave, mid-term arbitrage, and reloading on pullbacks. It may look like you're spreading your chips, but actually you're stacking a snowball.

When a coin enters the main upward wave, you capture the core gains; simultaneously, do short-term arbitrage on other targets to lock in steady returns; if a pullback occurs, the third part of your funds re-enter to average down. Running these three lines simultaneously prevents your account from big swings and ensures steady growth.

The benefit of this approach is emotional stability. No need for all-in risks, no regrets about all-out.

**Third Level: Discipline, Always the Top Yield**

Stop-loss fixed, take-profit in stages—these two sound simple but are the hardest to implement. Many know they should set stop-losses, but once triggered, they think "wait a bit"; they know they should take profits in parts, but can't bear to sell when prices are still rising.

Pre-define your plan before entering: entry point, add-on points, stop-loss, staged take-profit plan. After entering, let the market run on its own, without changing the plan. Mechanical execution may seem dull, but it's precisely the most profitable way.

Growing from $800U to $3,800U isn't achieved by a single big win, but by stacking over 20 small profits. Every time you stick to discipline, your account moves upward; slack off once, and previous efforts might be swallowed back.

**Why are most people still losing?**

It's simple—opportunities never lack; what’s missing is execution.

Trading daily but still losing indicates the problem isn't trading volume but the lack of logical support behind each trade. Two trades a day are fine, but each must have a complete entry/exit plan, risk assessment, and profit target. Only then is the trade valuable.

If you've blown your account, taken detours, or feel resentful seeing others profit; or if you have idle funds but don't know how to deploy them—this market cycle is a window to get back on track. The key is to find the right method and keep executing consistently.

The cruelest yet fairest point in the crypto world is: making money isn't about luck, but whether you can stick to that line between temptation and fear.
BREV7,86%
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MEVHunterLuckyvip
· 01-11 04:20
There's nothing wrong with that, but people with poor execution will still lose no matter how much they listen.
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ForkItAllDayvip
· 01-10 12:01
It sounds good, but the key is to have the right mindset. I looked around, and the most difficult thing to achieve is discipline.
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SandwichTradervip
· 01-08 06:18
It sounds good, but the key is that there are still too many people with poor execution skills.
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FloorPriceNightmarevip
· 01-08 06:18
That's right, it's just a matter of poor execution Wait, can stop-loss really be achieved? I think 99% of people can't do it Going from 800 to 3800 is indeed impressive, but how much luck does that require? I agree with the idea of position splitting; all-in is really the start of losing money Discipline is the hardest part; that's where I failed
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CryingOldWalletvip
· 01-08 06:16
Exactly right, but the execution phase has tripped up so many people... I myself am the same, the plan is written so well, but once the market hits, I get itchy hands and start messing around.
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LowCapGemHuntervip
· 01-08 05:58
Basically, it's a mental barrier. You know you should cut losses but can't bring yourself to do it, and even though you know you should sell in parts, you still want to go all-in.
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