Three months ago, I had only 3000U left in an old fan account. At that time, the market was volatile, and I didn't dare to take any risks. I was itching to make trades, but every attempt resulted in a loss, nearly wiping out my account.

Finally, I couldn't stand it any longer and asked me, "With this little capital, is there still a chance in the crypto space?"

I replied, "It's okay to have little capital; the key is to take it slow, don't go all in, and don't mess around."

Later, I offered him some advice:

Take out 100U from the 400U to trade contracts. With this amount, look for coins with high volatility but good liquidity, and strictly set stop-loss and take-profit levels. In the first round, he made a profit, turning 100 into 200.

Then he continued to roll over, turning 200 into 400.

In the final round, he achieved 400 to 800 and decided to stop there.

After three rounds, the account was close to 1100U, nearly tripling the capital.

However, these three opportunities are not available every day.

At most, make three rounds, and if you win, exit. If you get greedy, you'll end up in a liquidation.

After this, I stopped making trades frequently and instead spent time researching project whitepapers, team backgrounds, token models, and whether there are real users and ecological progress. I found that truly stable projects often have patterns in their early stages, which I hadn't noticed before.

Gradually, I started to make medium to long-term allocations, dividing the account into several parts:

One part for AI investments, one part for blockchain gaming tracks, and one part in native coins on L2 mainnets. I no longer thought about doubling my capital in the short term but focused on how not to lose and how to hold on.

At the same time, I also reevaluated leverage: it's not that I won't use it, but I absolutely won't misuse it. I only enter positions with light leverage when the trend is clear and risks are controllable, setting stop-loss and exit lines, avoiding unclear market conditions.

These methods have helped my fans reach where they are now, and it taught him one thing: even with small capital, there are ways to survive. But what you need to give up first is impatience, and what you need to change is impulsiveness, while learning patience and strategy.

Taking it slow is the real fast way.

Follow Uncle Nan, and let you experience the journey of turning your account around.

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