Many projects, once they go up, just keep falling. Don't the project parties know that falling continuously won't make money?

There's no way around it. The project parties know that pushing the price high for everyone is not as good as dropping it themselves at a low price. After all, it's all about making money, whether it's a lot or a little.

The project parties give advertising fees and marketing costs to marketing companies, and in the end, don’t they all need to get it back from the secondary market? Are they going to spend their own money?

Every step takes away liquidity, and shorting actually ends up leaving nothing to short.

When you think you can short 2B, then it becomes 1B, then 50M, then 20M, would you dare to short 10M?

Through continuous squeezing, the valuation of the project also decreases, completing a closed loop, and it may even save the primary market, as many people are currently not investing in the primary market due to overvaluation.

Capital flow needs to turn around.

Recently, by reviewing past events, many problems can be identified, namely where most of your money lost and where it was made.

The logic of losing money is very simple; it’s driven by market FOMO and crowd FOMO.

The logic of making money is also simple; it’s about having something you really like that happens to meet market demand, with many people helping to promote it, and then it takes off.

So one can conclude that making money requires support; what you need to do is make others help you, rather than helping others, or in the end, no one will help you.