Is the myth of getting rich in the crypto world dead? Do you still want to turn your life around through speculation?
To be blunt: the rich dividends of the crypto world have basically been consumed.
In the past, if you wanted to play in the primary market, you at least had to do your own research, flip projects, analyze liquidity pools, and learn wallets. And now? Exchanges offer a one-stop service, with no barriers to entry. Sounds more convenient, right? But the more convenient it is, the more people share the cake.
The cake is only so big; it used to be ten people sharing, now a thousand are fighting for it. Who can still get full? The ones who really benefit are always those with information asymmetry and resource advantages; most of us can only play the role of “background.”
In the past, the speculators at least pretended to slowly harvest profits; now they can’t even be bothered to pretend.
From “monthly cuts” to “daily cuts” to “hourly cuts,” the fast-food style of harvesting is clear as day.
In the past, you could have a concept, draw a pie chart, and catch a few big fish; now they can’t even be bothered to draw the pie chart and just come in for the outright theft.
Talking about the standardization of the crypto world? It's not entirely wrong, but don’t take it too seriously. It has now become a hybrid of “pseudo-standardization + unregulated,” which simply means: deceiving more clearly and harvesting more thoroughly.
Did you think Trump could bring a new narrative? In the end, Biden turned the entire financial market into a “personal stage show,” and the crypto world feels more like his ATM—where's the narrative? It's all just tricks.
In short:
It used to be wild growth with opportunities to get rich; now it’s about rule-based competition, and the myth of getting rich has collapsed.
Do you still want to turn your life around through speculation?
Wake up, the story of cutting leeks has just changed to a new batch of “sickles,” but the ones being harvested are still us, the onlookers.
Follow me, I'm not telling myths, just the truth.