The key issue is 'User Education'

Web2 users directly dive into Web3 projects, resulting in an educational gap.

The Web2 users mentioned here also include those who only trade cryptocurrencies on exchanges.

These people do not understand LP, withdrawing liquidity, the flow of funds on the chain, multiple addresses, low circulation, and high control. They have no way to judge these aspects and can only hope that the project's listing on exchanges has undergone strict enough scrutiny to ensure they are good projects.

Upon entry, they can easily engage with a simple mode to earn 200 USD, enjoying a month of effortless interaction, without needing to understand anything, only needing to study how many new rules alpha has added. Users have not grasped the volatility of tokens and how exaggerated the downturns can be.

These newcomers have completely missed out on the general education of trading cryptocurrencies; they haven't lost money or experienced extreme volatility, mistakenly believing that earning easy profits carries no risk. This leads to a cognitive gap, while they rush into alpha and frantically inflate trading volumes, ultimately getting wiped out.

Do those teaching you how to play with alpha not know about the volatility of tokens? They certainly do. But will they teach these things in their tutorials? No, because these are basic concepts in the crypto world. If you enter the space, you should understand them; if you don’t, you’re the foolish one.

Now, it’s great—you easily took money from others' pockets, but you didn't realize that you were also pushed onto the scaffolding yourself.