Recently, the market has shown the classic "Immortal Points the Way" pattern.
Many assets seemed to be holding their breath and suddenly used a single 15-minute candlestick to pull the entire weekly technical trend back up. This kind of rapid recovery is actually quite common in short time frames.
Here's an interesting perspective: for those traders who are obsessed with technical charts, what if you flipped the candlesticks upside down—do you think their judgments would remain the same? Sometimes a change in perspective can reveal something completely different. Technical analysis really isn't that absolute.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
24 Likes
Reward
24
10
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
APY_Chaser
· 2025-12-10 02:21
Pointing the Way? I think this is just the main players shaking out weak hands. Don't be fooled.
View OriginalReply0
MysteryBoxBuster
· 2025-12-10 02:07
Damn, the "guidance from the wise" strategy sounds pretty smooth, but when I look at the K-line chart upside down, all the signals are reversed. So funny.
View OriginalReply0
consensus_failure
· 2025-12-10 01:49
Oh no, the "Guiding Hand" trick is back again—always the same routine every time.
Looking at inverted candlesticks? Ha, that move is brilliant; it exposes a bunch of overconfident technical analysts right away.
Pulling the 15-minute chart all the way back to the weekly—really can't tell if it's the market or just psychological warfare.
View OriginalReply0
DAOTruant
· 2025-12-09 16:03
As for the "guiding hand" thing, I actually think people are overthinking it. That 15-minute candlestick bouncing back might just be a big sell order, but everyone insists on giving it a fancy name, right?
Looking at the candlestick chart upside down? Haha, wouldn't that make both newbies and experts equally confused, unable to understand it?
To put it bluntly, technical analysis is just a set of game rules. It only matters if everyone believes in it; it's really not that mystical.
After this round of correction, who can say for sure what happens next? In the end, it's just the gambler's mentality.
View OriginalReply0
GasWhisperer
· 2025-12-07 02:50
nah the fairy godmother candle is just noise, mempool tells the real story tbh... gas fees spiked exactly when that 15m wick printed, fee arbitrage opportunity missed again smh
Reply0
MevTears
· 2025-12-07 02:42
I've been hearing about "Immortal Guidance" for years, but it still comes down to whether it can actually hold up. A 15-minute pump doesn't mean much—the key is whether it can confirm on the weekly timeframe.
View OriginalReply0
SilentObserver
· 2025-12-07 02:41
I've heard the saying "pointing the way like an immortal" too many times. Anyway, I can't tell when it's a real expert and when it's just someone trying to cut leeks.
View OriginalReply0
ConfusedWhale
· 2025-12-07 02:39
Reversed and pulled back to the weekly line in 15 minutes—this move is truly incredible, it left me dazzled.
View OriginalReply0
ZkSnarker
· 2025-12-07 02:39
ngl the whole "flip the chart upside down" thing is exactly why i stopped pretending TA was science... it's just pattern recognition cosplay at this point
Reply0
SingleForYears
· 2025-12-07 02:28
The "pointing the way" meme is already everywhere; it'd be better to talk about what to do if you're stuck holding losing positions.
Recently, the market has shown the classic "Immortal Points the Way" pattern.
Many assets seemed to be holding their breath and suddenly used a single 15-minute candlestick to pull the entire weekly technical trend back up. This kind of rapid recovery is actually quite common in short time frames.
Here's an interesting perspective: for those traders who are obsessed with technical charts, what if you flipped the candlesticks upside down—do you think their judgments would remain the same? Sometimes a change in perspective can reveal something completely different. Technical analysis really isn't that absolute.