After observing for a while, the movement of the RIVER coin is indeed a bit strange. Looking at the large orders on the trading chart, it's hard not to suspect that the same group of funds is controlling the market, almost like a copy of PIPPIN's tactics. In this situation, small retail investors being eaten up by fees has become commonplace.
Rather than sitting and waiting for death, it's better to take proactive action. Once the price peaks and starts to fall back, my approach is to hold long positions while hedging to lock in risk. This way, I can participate in the rebound while protecting my principal when the market maker dumps. After all, in such a clearly manipulated market, betting on one side is just gambling. Keeping the trading rhythm in your own hands is the key to lasting longer.
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quietly_staking
· 01-19 01:27
The dealer's tricks are really getting old, RIVER and PIPPIN are the same, retail investors are still waiting foolishly.
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ChainMemeDealer
· 01-18 12:42
I'm too familiar with this trick; PIPPIN was already caught in that move, and RIVER is also the same... the market maker only knows this move.
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LiquidationWizard
· 01-17 18:10
This tactic has been played out, RIVER is just a copy-paste of PIPPIN, and the dealer's methods are the same as the template. Retail investors are still sleepwalking, getting cut and doubting life. Hedging is indeed a safe move, definitely better than going all-in and waiting for death.
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RugDocDetective
· 01-16 04:58
Zhuangzi is back again, the RIVER tactic is really everywhere now, just like PIPPIN, retail investors lose everything and that's it.
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gm_or_ngmi
· 01-16 04:56
Manipulating the market is a tactic that is repeatedly used; retail investors should learn to hedge and save themselves.
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Layer3Dreamer
· 01-16 04:56
theoretically speaking, if we map the order flow dynamics you're describing onto a recursive state verification model... the whales are literally just executing cross-rollup arbitrage patterns, ngl. RIVER's got those classic bridge liquidity vectors everyone sleeps on.
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GateUser-beba108d
· 01-16 04:56
Haha, I'm tired of the RIVER routine; it's just a different guise of the same old scam.
Hedging positions is a good move; it's definitely better than getting stuck with an all-in loss.
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ProbablyNothing
· 01-16 04:53
The market is controlled by large players; retail investors should learn to hedge, or else it's really a waste.
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blocksnark
· 01-16 04:44
Damn, the RIVER strategy is really a copy of PIPPIN. Is the market maker so blatant? Retail investors' blood is about to be spilled for nothing.
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Hedging sounds professional, but how many can actually execute it properly? Most people still get wrecked.
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Alright, rather than daydreaming, might as well take a gamble since we're already in.
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This market looks like it's driven by funds. Our only way out as small investors is not to go all in, or you'll definitely die.
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Thinking of those coins before, the strategies are all the same. The ones who bought at high prices are probably still crying now.
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Hedging positions sounds good, but the problem is the fees can eat you alive, especially with these deflationary coins.
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RIVER is a bit strange, but I'll still watch the show and wait for more obvious signals.
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ParallelChainMaxi
· 01-16 04:39
I've already seen through it. The RIVER chart is just a copy-paste of PIPPIN. The manipulator's tactics are really unoriginal.
After observing for a while, the movement of the RIVER coin is indeed a bit strange. Looking at the large orders on the trading chart, it's hard not to suspect that the same group of funds is controlling the market, almost like a copy of PIPPIN's tactics. In this situation, small retail investors being eaten up by fees has become commonplace.
Rather than sitting and waiting for death, it's better to take proactive action. Once the price peaks and starts to fall back, my approach is to hold long positions while hedging to lock in risk. This way, I can participate in the rebound while protecting my principal when the market maker dumps. After all, in such a clearly manipulated market, betting on one side is just gambling. Keeping the trading rhythm in your own hands is the key to lasting longer.