In this market, most people are 'new love, old hate'. My personal standard is a bit 'impatient': if a plate has been open for more than an hour, it's considered an old plate, and I generally won't touch it. Unless this plate comes with a particularly amazing halo that makes me tear up when I go for it.

Of course, everyone has their own way of playing, especially those big-money players, who can only find fun in those 'getting fat and prosperous' old plates. Why? Because the more a plate rises, the more information there is, and the clearer the thinking becomes, just like a 'hundred-year-old piece of bread': the more you break it, the more substance there is.

Speaking of which, this situation is very much like scratch cards. Suppose the winning number is 8, and before scratching off the coating, the number underneath could be any from 1 to 9. Friends who participate early look at a whole coated card and can only guess blindly with a 1/9 chance of winning. But as this plate grows bigger, when half the coating is scratched off—wow, at this point it seems like we can see something, the right side of the outline looks a bit like 8! At this moment, the probability of winning upgrades from 1/9 to 1/2! It's no longer blind guessing; there's a bit of hope.

Of course, there are also some people who already know that beneath this coating is an 8. We call these people 'insider big shots' or 'smart money'; this is what we call an information gap. Want to know in advance? Sure! Either your connections are strong enough, or you have the 'Sherlock Holmes' vibe on-chain. Smart money, although clever, still leaves traces on-chain; whether you can 'follow the clues' depends on your treasure-hunting skills on the chain.

In the crypto circle, chasing newness and excitement is common, but it's not without strategy: combining information advantages with some cleverness, seizing the opportunity, is like keeping an eye on a scratch card about to reveal an '8'—maybe the next big prize is yours!