Seeing many people discuss the crypto market, especially hot coins like SUI, there's always someone who jumps in and immediately wants to turn things around. Honestly, if your principal is less than 5000U, don't rush in and go all out right away.
I've seen too many accounts. Those who ultimately survive are never the ones who go the hardest. Quite the opposite.
Small funds standing on the edge of a cliff, a single impulsive move and it's game over. So the first lesson is: surviving is the top priority.
Recently, a newbie came to me with an account balance of just over 2000U. I saw his hands trembling while placing orders. I only told him one thing—don't think about turning things around now, don't kill yourself trying.
It sounds like common sense, but it's really crucial.
What happened later? In less than a month, his account doubled several times. After that, he reached six figures. Never liquidated his position, no miraculous operations, just execution.
His approach is actually very simple:
**Don’t put all your money in one basket**. Always leave yourself a way out. If you make a wrong call, you won't die.
**Don’t go against the trend aggressively**. Don’t mess around in volatile swings. Take profits when you can and exit.
**Cut losses at the right time**. Never add to a losing position.
You can be wrong about the market, that’s okay. But repeatedly breaking your own rules—that’s self-destructive.
Many people think having a small principal is a big obstacle. It’s not. The
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GasGrillMaster
· 4h ago
That's right, those accounts all died from greed. I also see plenty of such examples around me—people come in wanting to go all in.
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Alright, I'll say this: those who can't cut their losses deserve to get liquidated.
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This stuff has been heard a thousand times, but no one can really do it. Execution is truly the only moat.
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Less than 5000U and still dare to go against the trend? You're asking for death.
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It's okay to misjudge the market, but the problem is falling into the same trap again and again, jumping in two or three times.
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Turning a small amount into six figures really just depends on not doing stupid things. It sounds old-fashioned, but it's the truth.
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Diversifying your holdings—99% of people know it but can't do it. Always thinking of betting everything on one shot.
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That guy doubled his money several times in a month—do you really think he's doing any fancy tricks? It's hard to believe.
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The biggest problem for beginners is trembling hands. They shake and shake until they lose everything.
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I think, actually, having a small principal can be an advantage. People who can't afford to lose money tend to last longer.
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ChainMelonWatcher
· 4h ago
That's right, I've seen too many small accounts get wiped out directly due to greed, it's really tragic.
But speaking of which, execution is the hardest part; everyone knows the rules but just can't do it.
This gentleman turned over 2000U into a six-figure amount, definitely worth learning from.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 4h ago
Really, too many accounts blow up because people can't control their hands.
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The biggest fear with small money isn't a bad market, but wanting to take a gamble.
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Discipline hits hard; most people fail because they keep changing the rules.
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It's really not worth risking below 5000U; stay alive first and worry about the rest later.
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Stop-loss is easy to say, but when you're truly losing, how many can cut it cleanly?
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Misreading the market isn't the problem; the problem is continuing to add when you've already misjudged, which is ridiculous.
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Diversifying risk sounds old-fashioned, but it can definitely help you survive several more rounds.
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Stacking six figures from 2000U isn't about luck; it's about self-discipline, and that's the hard part.
Seeing many people discuss the crypto market, especially hot coins like SUI, there's always someone who jumps in and immediately wants to turn things around. Honestly, if your principal is less than 5000U, don't rush in and go all out right away.
I've seen too many accounts. Those who ultimately survive are never the ones who go the hardest. Quite the opposite.
Small funds standing on the edge of a cliff, a single impulsive move and it's game over. So the first lesson is: surviving is the top priority.
Recently, a newbie came to me with an account balance of just over 2000U. I saw his hands trembling while placing orders. I only told him one thing—don't think about turning things around now, don't kill yourself trying.
It sounds like common sense, but it's really crucial.
What happened later? In less than a month, his account doubled several times. After that, he reached six figures. Never liquidated his position, no miraculous operations, just execution.
His approach is actually very simple:
**Don’t put all your money in one basket**. Always leave yourself a way out. If you make a wrong call, you won't die.
**Don’t go against the trend aggressively**. Don’t mess around in volatile swings. Take profits when you can and exit.
**Cut losses at the right time**. Never add to a losing position.
You can be wrong about the market, that’s okay. But repeatedly breaking your own rules—that’s self-destructive.
Many people think having a small principal is a big obstacle. It’s not. The