You create the illusion of opportunity and let people chase it—building exposure they didn't originally plan for. Then comes the inevitable pivot: they're hedging everything. The real move is understanding how the narrative flips from "easy gains" to "risk management." That's where the market reveals itself.
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DegenWhisperer
· 01-06 23:45
Nah, this is just the usual way to trap new investors—first hype it up with sweet talk and downplay the risks. Players have already suffered heavy losses.
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ChainDoctor
· 01-06 20:51
It's the same old trick, first make promises to lure people in, then when the retail investors wake up, they start talking about risk management... really exploiting human nature to the fullest.
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SquidTeacher
· 01-06 20:47
It's just a scam, first make promises and then exploit the investors. Smart people have seen through it long ago.
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LiquidatorFlash
· 01-06 20:46
Before the threshold is triggered, it's all "this wave is a guaranteed profit"; after the trigger, it's all "I'm hedging"... I've seen this script too many times.
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Anon32942
· 01-06 20:44
Ah, this is just a routine cycle... tease first, then drop the punchline, it's all about psychological games.
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fren.eth
· 01-06 20:36
Narrative reversal is essentially the standard operation process of cutting leeks, and I'm already tired of seeing it.
You create the illusion of opportunity and let people chase it—building exposure they didn't originally plan for. Then comes the inevitable pivot: they're hedging everything. The real move is understanding how the narrative flips from "easy gains" to "risk management." That's where the market reveals itself.