The end of trading cryptocurrencies is quantum entanglement.
Einstein once referred to quantum entanglement as 'spooky action at a distance'—two particles, even if separated by the ends of the universe, will respond synchronously if they were once entangled. He could not believe the universe would allow such counterintuitive phenomena to exist, but later experiments proved: reality does not care whether you understand it; it just happens.
And the crypto world is precisely the best experimental ground for quantum entanglement.
1. There are no isolated market movements in the crypto world, only entangled state collapses.
You open the market software and find that BTC has risen by 2%, and then Altcoins collectively follow suit; before you can react, Dogecoin suddenly surges, with SHIB, WIF, and PEPE following closely; a previously obscure meme coin on Solana suddenly moves, and five 'twin brothers' immediately appear on the Base and BSC chains.
This is not a simple market linkage but a deeper system entanglement. A disturbance in one place will irreversibly affect the global state—price changes are just the surface; behind them are the synchronous reconstruction of on-chain funds, wallet activities, and community emotions. There is no causal relationship, only simultaneity.
2. You think you are observing the market, but in fact, you have become a variable.
Retail investors always feel they can 'independently judge' by staring at K-lines, chips, and order data to find entry opportunities. But the problem is: every click you make is changing the state of the system.
There is a core principle in quantum mechanics: observation is intervention. You think you are analyzing market trends, but the market is analyzing you as well. Prices freeze under your gaze, but they crash instantaneously at the moment you submit your order; set your take-profit level, and the market will always be a penny short of hitting it. This is not coincidence; the system recognizes you as a disturbance factor.
You are not predicting the future; you are participating in the future.
3. Who is entangled with you? The answer may be hidden in the dark.
Some are keen on tracking whale wallets, but the truth is harsher: the whale you are eyeing has long been entangled with you.
When a smart money address ambushes a new coin on Uniswap, you are completely unaware. A few hours later, Telegram groups and X platform suddenly surge with buy signals. You follow and buy in, falling into FOMO, thinking you've seized the opportunity, but in reality, you are already the last leg.
A non-local correlation has formed between you and that wallet: you do not know them, but your actions have been influenced by them. This is not plagiarism; it is the synchronous collapse of quantum states.
4. The fate of laggards: always arriving after the collapse.
Another characteristic of quantum entanglement is: effective information cannot be transmitted. Although the states of particles change synchronously, no one can predict the specific form and timing of the change.
This is reminiscent of retail investors trying to 'predict the intentions of major players'—all you can see are historical data, and the only interpretations are results that have already collapsed. Your efforts are doomed to lag because you have never participated in the construction of the wave function.
5. The secret of top traders: creating observation traps.
Those who truly control the market never chase trends. Their core ability is to design observation traps:
Create volatility, induce retail attention.
Use your reactions to reverse the operation.
What you see are price increases and decreases; what they see is your reaction to these changes.
When you think you are capturing a trend, you are actually driving the self-fulfillment of that trend. The gap between you lies in who controls the timing of the collapse of the superposition state.
6. Winning and losing hands: positional differences in information dimensions.
The ultimate truth revealed by quantum entanglement is: the world is not a collection of isolated individuals but an entangled whole. The crypto world is no different—market movements are never the performance of a single coin but a resonance of narrative, liquidity, whale behavior, and platform dynamics at a higher dimension.
Whether you can profit does not depend on analytical ability but rather on the depth of your entanglement with key nodes. Those outside the system, no matter how smart, will only be aware in hindsight.
Conclusion
Physics tells us: all superpositions will eventually collapse.
The crypto world tells us: the first mover determines the direction of the collapse.
When you want to place an order, you might as well ask yourself:
This time, are you the observer holding the quantum, or the observed particle?