I talked with someone in the morning about the differences between several chains. I thought about my habits; I mainly play on BSC, and I also play on other chains. After trying a few times, I found that I can only play when the chain is hot. When there isn't much funding in the chain, I just look for some previously favored assets to buy at the bottom, without needing to operate frequently.
I mainly play on Sol for hot projects, but when there isn't much funding, hot projects have low volume and are hard to play.
I am not very familiar with Base; currently, I am mainly trying to understand it around virtucal.
For Sui, I just need to wait for $sui to rise, then a few memes may take off.
The current way to play on BSC is to watch the market makers. If the market maker has good resources, we don’t need to pay attention to market cap trends; we might get some support. Another aspect is to look at the play style itself, such as dividend projects and community projects.
Let’s review the holdings on BSC.
$u: Currently, it’s hard to tell which category it belongs to; the trading volume is low, and the number of holders is also not many, but the price has not dropped, so it shouldn't be aimed at trading contests. Let’s see how far it can go.
$jager: There is a USD1 liquidity pool, and 0.11% of the chips have remained since the trading volume has decreased significantly; now the dividends need to be pooled for a few days to claim.
$CA: USD1 liquidity pool, has gone on alpha; although the price is falling, the trading volume is still very high.
EGL1: 55 million initially, now 45 million. Let’s see if I can get first place in the trading contest to break even.
0xdream: MCP basic protocol, 7 million initially, now 4.3 million.
$KOMA: An old, old project, no need to say more, it has always been there, and I haven’t sold any.
$BMP: A picture coin project, previously on ETH, recently crossed over, initially 3 million, now 3.9 million.