The market performance of coins like CRV reflects a phenomenon: currently, shorting newly issued tokens has become the main profit strategy, but those old value coins with significant declines are actually avoided by traders—fearing being shorted in reverse. As a result, the long positions pile up, but they fail to push the market further. The entire market structure has changed, and the myth of huge profits has almost disappeared, relying instead on real trading skills. The current scene is more like a blue ocean competition, with more participants and dispersed strategies. Its attractiveness has clearly declined, and the community is gradually aging.
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NeverPresent
· 13h ago
These days, no one dares to touch those old coins that have plummeted to the ground, fearing reverse liquidation. It's faster to focus on new coins for quick gains.
Even a mountain of long positions can't move the market; that's the real skill... The market has changed, and those hoping for instant wealth should wake up.
This round of CRV market clearly shows that competition is too fierce, strategies are all over the place, the circle is outdated, and newcomers have no chance.
Only those who truly know how to trade can survive; relying on luck and information gaps is a thing of the past.
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Degen4Breakfast
· 13h ago
Old coins have all become landmines, new coins are all about cutting leeks, how do you play?
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The era of huge profits is really over, now it's all about competing in trading skills.
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Shorting new coins for quick money, but old value coins are even more terrifying, fighting back against you without mercy.
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Funds pile up but can't push the market, that's the most heartbreaking part.
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Blue ocean competition? Isn't it just that the circle is saturated and it's not that easy to make money anymore.
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More and more people entering the market makes it increasingly difficult to profit, this is called fate.
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What does this wave of CRV market movement tell us? Everyone has learned to be smart.
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The circle aging is real, it feels like no fresh blood is coming in.
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The logic of shorting has changed, who dares to touch those old coins that have plummeted.
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The myth has disappeared, what's left is a game of leeks and sickles.
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airdrop_whisperer
· 13h ago
This broken market has really changed. In the past, you could get rich by bottom fishing, but now you have to think about going against others, exhausting yourself.
No one dares to touch old coins, and new coins are all traps. How are retail investors stuck in the middle supposed to survive?
Talking about blue ocean competition, I see it as a stock game; everyone is stabbing each other in the back.
Funds are piling into longs, and the market still isn't dead. It takes more effort to compete.
The huge profits are gone, and the circle is still bloodsucking. What's the point of playing like this?
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LightningAllInHero
· 14h ago
Old coins have all become time bombs; no one dares to touch them.
New coins are sold off quickly, and profits are lost.
Really, the way of playing in this circle has changed.
The bears are all dead, and the bulls can't make money either.
And people still rush in? Laughs.
The market is getting more and more outdated; new players coming in are just wasting time.
The market performance of coins like CRV reflects a phenomenon: currently, shorting newly issued tokens has become the main profit strategy, but those old value coins with significant declines are actually avoided by traders—fearing being shorted in reverse. As a result, the long positions pile up, but they fail to push the market further. The entire market structure has changed, and the myth of huge profits has almost disappeared, relying instead on real trading skills. The current scene is more like a blue ocean competition, with more participants and dispersed strategies. Its attractiveness has clearly declined, and the community is gradually aging.