The dealer gameplay for $RIVER is very straightforward—it's all about repeated harvesting. The cycle of long and short traps repeats over and over. Retail investors who go short risk being smashed to the top or losing a lot just on fees; those trying to follow the trend and go long often get trapped at high points. Every time the price is about to break through previous highs, it gets smashed down, then pushed back up, and this cycle repeats. The most outrageous part is that the market cap still remains stable around 1.1 billion, indicating that the dealer's funds are indeed deep. Under this rhythm, without sufficient risk tolerance and precise entry timing, it's very easy to be repeatedly harvested, and liquidity traps are hard to defend against.
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WalletDetective
· 01-19 01:27
This thing is just a money-grappling machine; those who bought in at high prices are all dead.
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rekt_but_vibing
· 01-16 22:31
It's the same trick again, players get cornered round after round.
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ConfusedWhale
· 01-16 01:57
Here comes the same old trick of cutting leeks again; retail investors are always the big losers.
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Never touch this kind of coin; it's obvious at a glance that it's a playground for whales.
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A market cap of 1.1 billion and still playing like this? The depth of funds is indeed outrageous.
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I've truly seen it all with the long and short double kill; whoever enters, dies.
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Timing the entry is really just gambling with luck, to be honest.
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Getting smashed at critical points every time—how unethical is that?
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Losing all your fees and still wanting to make money—dream on.
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The term "liquidity trap" is so fitting; there's no way to prevent it.
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RiddleMaster
· 01-16 01:57
Damn, this trick is old, but some people still fall for it.
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TrustMeBro
· 01-16 01:56
It's the same old trick again; those who bought in at high prices are crying.
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 01-16 01:39
Still trying to cut leeks again, this tactic is really old and worn out.
The dealer gameplay for $RIVER is very straightforward—it's all about repeated harvesting. The cycle of long and short traps repeats over and over. Retail investors who go short risk being smashed to the top or losing a lot just on fees; those trying to follow the trend and go long often get trapped at high points. Every time the price is about to break through previous highs, it gets smashed down, then pushed back up, and this cycle repeats. The most outrageous part is that the market cap still remains stable around 1.1 billion, indicating that the dealer's funds are indeed deep. Under this rhythm, without sufficient risk tolerance and precise entry timing, it's very easy to be repeatedly harvested, and liquidity traps are hard to defend against.