This table is full of tough people! All are big shots in the cryptocurrency world, all are born in the 2000s, and the youngest among them is 20 years old.
20-year-old Liangxi shared a screenshot of his account on Twitter: on February 25, he shorted Ethereum and made 1.1 million USDT in half an hour. He won the Hebei championship in 'Honor of Kings' at 15, and at 18, he leveraged 100 times to trade Bitcoin, turning 2000 yuan into 40 million in a month, earning him the title of 'Contract War God' in the crypto community.
Zohar from Fuzhou, Fujian entered the market even earlier. He lost all his 3000 yuan pocket money buying Bitcoin in high school and later invested in NFTs after dropping out of university, achieving daily returns that multiplied by dozens of times. He is currently a dropout from the Chinese University of Hong Kong while also holding the titles of 'Co-founder of a certain Art DAO' and 'Web3 Investor'.
This group of people has a common trait—they originally came from wealthy families. Meepo, a miner from Meizhou, Guangdong, mined Bitcoin on an old computer given by his family in middle school, and his parents later bought him a professional mining machine. Xiao Yu from Loudi, Hunan invested his 10,000 yuan scholarship entirely into Trump Coin, losing it all in half an hour, but he said, 'My family still has two properties for demolition.'
Their approach to cryptocurrency is quite wild. Zhang Qiang, a trader from Ganzhou, Jiangxi, focuses on 'celebrity coins.' When Trump was elected, he leveraged 10 times to buy Trump Coin, only for the price to plummet from 83 dollars to 37 dollars, instantly evaporating 7200 yuan. He said, 'Consider it tuition; my dad's factory profits are enough for me to play ten times.'
Cryptocurrency lawyers have recently mentioned another name: Yang Qichao. This college student born in the 2000s issued BFF Coin in 2022, withdrawing liquidity within 24 seconds, causing investors to lose 50,000 USDT. In February this year, a court in Henan sentenced him to four and a half years in prison, making it the first case in the country to criminalize the withdrawal of liquidity.
These young people all hold thousands of Bitcoins. Based on the current market, each of them is worth at least 230 million yuan. Liangxi recently predicted that Ethereum will drop below 1,000 dollars, and his Twitter comment section is filled with followers, with someone commenting: 'After following this trade, I can return home to build a villa too.'