Friends in the circle gave me a nickname, called 'Lamp God'.
Every time I wave my hand: 'No, this name is too mysterious, I'm just someone who lights the way a few steps ahead of you.'
I remember last autumn, FET was as quiet as a still lake. I casually mentioned in a small group: 'The combination of AI and blockchain may not be just a gimmick; something like FET, I think it's worth keeping an eye on.' At that time, no one responded. After a while, someone joked: 'Is the Lamp God going to polish again and grant us wishes?' I didn't say much, just silently shared a screenshot of my position - not much, but enough sincerity.
Later, $FET soared, multiplying dozens of times. The early batch of friends who quietly followed and bought came back, excitedly flooding the chat: 'Thank you, Lamp God, for bringing us ashore!' But I knew in my heart, I was no god; I just caught a whiff of rain before the wind picked up.
Then there was the $AXS airdrop. I wrote a 'monster-slaying guide' three months in advance, teaching everyone how to interact step by step. The process was cumbersome and consumed gas; some people cursed and left halfway, saying I was just painting a big picture. But on the day the results came out, the group exploded - some recovered all the tuition fees lost over the years, and others made a decent 'salary' for the first time in the crypto world.
I never promise 'guaranteed profits'; the market has no 'teachers'. For every opportunity, I insist on researching, testing, and evaluating risks myself before speaking. Just like recently when the RWA track was just starting, I clearly stated: 'This is a long-term logic, don't use urgent money, don't leverage, invest in batches with the money you can sleep on.'
Interestingly, the ones who were willing to believe and take action at the beginning were often the newcomers. They are pure; once they believe, they roll up their sleeves and get to work. On the other hand, those who consider themselves 'old leeks' analyze left and hesitate right, ultimately missing out, only to rush back later asking: 'Can I still chase it?'
Recently, the MEME frenzy has reignited, and I immediately issued a notice reminding: 'Early high returns are possible, but now it's the tail end of passing the buck; don't FOMO, don't go all in, and definitely don't borrow money to rush in!' Some people took it to heart, controlled their impulses, set their stop-loss limits, and as long as their accounts are alive, there will always be the next opportunity.
I used to stumble around in the dark alone, but now the lamp is in my hand.
The lamp is always on; will you follow? @币来财888