Many people enter the crypto space with the goal of getting rich overnight, but often end up getting wiped out. However, some have used seemingly conservative methods, growing from a few hundred USDT to eight-figure assets. What's the difference? It's not luck, but those anti-human trading disciplines.



Three years ago, I entered the crypto market with 600 USDT in hand. At that time, there were voices everywhere about "ten-bag coins" and "myth of doubling," but looking back now, the rules that can survive are more valuable than any prediction.

**The Deadly Mistake of Small Funds: You Must Gamble Because You're Small**

I've seen too many traders who go all-in with just a few hundred USDT on a single coin, only to be wiped out by a single correction. This is not investing; it's gambling in a casino. Small funds indeed mean less capital, but precisely because of that, they can't withstand a big loss. Conversely, those who survive understand one principle—holding onto their principal tightly is the only way to turn things around.

**Three-Position System: Building an Unkillable Trading Framework**

At that time, I divided 600 USDT into three parts, each serving different goals.

The first part accounts for 30%, used for intraday short-term trading. Lock in 3%-5% volatility in mainstream coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum. Enter and exit quickly; take profits and leave. Cut losses decisively. Like hunting—aim, strike, harvest or retreat, no dragging on.

The second part is also 30%, dedicated to swing trading. Only act when specific signals appear—like MACD golden cross combined with a surge in volume. Positions are usually held for 3 to 5 days. The goal here isn't to catch the entire trend but to seize the most profitable middle segment.

The third part is the crucial 40%, the seed capital that remains untouched. No matter how crazy the market or how intense the FOMO, this part is for steadfast holding. When Bitcoin dropped 30% last year, who survived? Those willing to freeze 40% of their capital.

**Why this allocation can outperform most people**

Risk comes from disorder. When all your funds are mixed in one account and operated randomly, one mistake can be fatal. But with a multi-position system— even if the intraday position gets caught, the swing and seed positions remain; even if the swing hits a trap, there's still 30% for intraday agility and 40% for defensive capital.

The beauty of this system is that it allows you to make mistakes but not to lose everything. Small funds inherently have weaker risk resistance, so they need stricter discipline than big players.

**Cold-blooded Rules at the Execution Level**

Someone asked: If I only have 800 USDT, should I leverage to gamble? The answer is—if you haven't yet built your trading system, leverage will only accelerate your exit. The biggest advantage of small funds isn't quick doubling, but limited losses and low trial-and-error costs. Use this advantage to refine your trading logic, much smarter than blindly leveraging.

Three years of experience repeatedly confirms one fact: in the crypto market, surviving is more difficult than making money. Those stories about "doubling ten times in two weeks" or "small funds must gamble" are mostly survivor bias. The real secret lies in those boring, disciplined, and counter-human disciplines—precisely where most people give up.
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DataBartendervip
· 5h ago
Wow, this is exactly my mental journey from three years ago. It’s so heartbreaking. Living is truly harder than making money. I agree with this to my core. I'm the kind of person who goes all-in with full position size; only after being harvested do I understand the benefits of position sizing. Seemingly boring discipline is actually the price of survival. Most people simply can't stick to it. That 40% of seed capital, I want to move it every time now, but I’m increasingly understanding the power of letting go.
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QuorumVotervip
· 5h ago
Honestly, I've been using this position-splitting logic for a long time. The key is that most people simply can't stick to that 40% seed capital. Damn, it's always survivors telling stories—600 to eight figures? How many three-year periods does that take? Sounds boring? Exactly, making money has never been sexy. That's the kind of thing I want to hear, not that ten-bagger myth and all that garbage. Without leverage, you really dare to talk? Small funds test your mentality the most. I've seen many people go all-in with full positions, and now they're all gone—only those who can chat remain. I always get stopped out when trading intraday short-term; what should I do? Discipline is easy to talk about but really damn hard to practice. But this strategy definitely lasts much longer than my previous chaotic operations.
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Rugpull幸存者vip
· 5h ago
You're right, but I have to say, executing it is a thousand times harder than the theory. Can that 40% really be frozen? --- I’ve used this three-position strategy, and it indeed lasts longer. It just feels uncomfortable when the market is rising. --- Haha, it's the same theory again. The problem is most people can't even reach that point; once FOMO kicks in, everything is gone. --- The biggest fear for small funds isn't actually not doubling, but doubling and then losing it all back. That’s the cycle. --- Holding onto seed capital? Ha, I really held onto it last year during that wave, and I’m still stopping the bleeding now. --- Sounds good, but the key is mindset. Nine out of ten people around me who could survive three years are dead. --- Alright, then I’ll ask, splitting 800 bucks into three positions is pointless anyway, I can’t even afford the transaction fees. --- The most heartbreaking phrase is "survivor bias." You're right, most stories are about the dead, no one remembers them. --- Position splitting is good, but it’s not clear how to choose coins. If you pick the wrong coin, splitting doesn’t help at all. --- This strategy is indeed disciplined, but in a bull market, it’s just the rhythm of being laughed at. The returns look too mediocre.
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AirdropHunterWangvip
· 6h ago
嗯行,40%种子资金这招我服,去年确实看到好多梭哈仔在暴跌时出局了
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ApeWithNoChainvip
· 6h ago
That's so true. The biggest fear for small funds is that gambler mentality—going all in and losing everything in one shot. Many people haven't really thought through whether they are investing or gambling. These three-tier position systems are indeed worth considering, especially that 40% seed capital, which truly requires discipline. I've seen too many experts boast about quick doubling, only to face a sharp decline and be forced out all at once. It's easy to talk about, but surviving is incredibly difficult. Not using leverage is a brilliant point—so many people get wiped out because they rush to leverage up. Living is truly harder than making money; this really hits home.
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