At the end of the day, no one truly understands what information hunting really means.

Last year at 2 AM, after my seventh liquidation, I sat in front of my computer, completely dazed. At that moment, a mysterious big shot threw me a trading manual from the dark web.

After reading that thing, my mind buzzed, as if I had opened up my energy channels. Following the methods above for half a year, 3000U turned into 287,000U.

The first step is to stop the bleeding. Many people lose money within a week of entering the market, not because they can't trade, but because they can't resist the temptation of hundredfold leverage, thinking they can get rich overnight.

At that time, I divided my 3000U into three parts: 2000U for spot trading, only buying the top 20 coins by market cap, intentionally skipping the 3rd, 7th, and 15th; 800U for arbitrage; and the remaining 200U for emergencies.

The second step is called 'bloodsucking', which is truly exhilarating, steadily pulling in 3%-5% returns from exchanges every day. Just focus on two signals: either the BTC/USDT price difference exceeds 1.5% on a second-tier exchange, or the perpetual funding rate stays below -0.02% for 12 consecutive hours.

As soon as the signal comes out, immediately hedge: buy spot with all funds at exchange A while opening an equivalent short position at exchange B, so that you can pocket the income from the price difference, funding rate, and volatility.

Last month, just by relying on this move, I made an extra 4273U.

The third step is the killer move. Once the money in your account exceeds 20,000U, you can start playing with new coins, which is the real hunting ground where doubling or tripling is not uncommon.

Turning 3000U into 300,000U isn't magical; it's all about execution and information advantage.

Don't let emotions lead you; rules are your weapon for survival in the crypto world. If you really want to turn your fortunes around here, come talk to me.

What the crypto world lacks is not opportunities, but execution capability. Operating with 1000U, 10000U, or 100000U is all the same.