After spending a long time in the crypto market, you’ll realize: there are some tokens you should never touch. This may sound mysterious, but it’s a lesson paid for with real money.
Have you ever seen this kind of price action? In the industry, it’s called a “guillotine”—a token drops vertically by more than 70% in just a few hours or within a day. Like a headsman’s blade, one swipe and it’s a bloodbath.
See this chart pattern? No matter what good or bad news is behind it, just run first, ask questions later.
The logic is simple. This isn’t a technical correction. A normal pullback is like being cut with a dull knife—slow and steady; the guillotine is when the main players exit directly, not even bothering to put on a show. Big money is stampeding for the exit at any cost, desperate to dump all their bags into USDT instantly.
What’s the most dangerous thought after a crash? “It’s fallen so much, time to buy the dip, right?” Wake up! What you see as “cheap” is actually a sign of dead liquidity and a project team that might have already abandoned ship. You think you’re buying the dip? In reality, you’re catching a falling knife.
What usually happens next? After the crash comes a long, slow grind downward. Occasionally, there’s a small bounce? That’s not an opportunity—it’s bait, set to lure in hopeful retail traders. In the end, this token will quietly fade from everyone’s view, as if it never existed.
If you’re unlucky and happen to be holding a token with this pattern, what should you do? Don’t hope for a V-shaped recovery.
A more realistic move: watch the market closely, and the moment there’s any decent rebound, cut your losses and get out. Salvage what’s left of your capital and move it to assets with healthy trends and solid trading volume. Holding on? That’s just letting your losses eat away at your funds and judgment like cancer.
Everyone who survives in this market for the long term understands one core principle: knowing what not to do. Actively avoid obvious death traps, and your survival odds are already better than most.
Remember this: your job isn’t to rescue every crashing token, but to protect your principal and patiently wait for clear, genuine trading opportunities that are truly yours.
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FlippedSignal
· 14h ago
The "guillotine" metaphor is spot on. Every time I try to catch the bottom, I've been traumatized.
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YieldFarmRefugee
· 15h ago
The guillotine metaphor is perfect—I keep thinking of the disastrous situation with those few coins last year... Now I have to be extra cautious when looking at charts.
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BlockchainArchaeologist
· 12-06 19:51
The term "guillotine" is really spot-on, it's absolutely right. I've seen too many tragedies of retail investors catching falling knives.
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MevHunter
· 12-06 14:20
That guillotine part was so real. Last time I couldn't resist buying the dip, and now that coin is just sitting in my wallet collecting dust.
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UnluckyValidator
· 12-06 14:20
I didn't get out during the guillotine drop last time, and I'm still stuck holding the bag. It's a hard lesson learned.
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PretendingSerious
· 12-06 14:17
You're absolutely right, I've seen too many guillotine drops—painful lessons learned.
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Those guys who tried to catch the bottom, where are they now?
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Damn, I see people saying it's time to buy the dip again. Some people just never learn.
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Capital preservation comes first, everything else is nonsense.
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When the big players are running away, you're still staring at the candlestick chart.
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Liquidity death means a death sentence—remember that.
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Sell on every rebound, no exceptions.
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Just protecting your principal already puts you ahead of most people. That's so true.
View OriginalReply0
WagmiOrRekt
· 12-06 14:16
That's pretty harsh, but it really is a lesson learned the hard way... I once lost out badly in a forced liquidation, and that feeling was truly hopeless.
View OriginalReply0
AlwaysQuestioning
· 12-06 14:12
The term "guillotine" is spot on. I've actually been wrecked by it before.
After spending a long time in the crypto market, you’ll realize: there are some tokens you should never touch. This may sound mysterious, but it’s a lesson paid for with real money.
Have you ever seen this kind of price action? In the industry, it’s called a “guillotine”—a token drops vertically by more than 70% in just a few hours or within a day. Like a headsman’s blade, one swipe and it’s a bloodbath.
See this chart pattern? No matter what good or bad news is behind it, just run first, ask questions later.
The logic is simple. This isn’t a technical correction. A normal pullback is like being cut with a dull knife—slow and steady; the guillotine is when the main players exit directly, not even bothering to put on a show. Big money is stampeding for the exit at any cost, desperate to dump all their bags into USDT instantly.
What’s the most dangerous thought after a crash? “It’s fallen so much, time to buy the dip, right?” Wake up! What you see as “cheap” is actually a sign of dead liquidity and a project team that might have already abandoned ship. You think you’re buying the dip? In reality, you’re catching a falling knife.
What usually happens next? After the crash comes a long, slow grind downward. Occasionally, there’s a small bounce? That’s not an opportunity—it’s bait, set to lure in hopeful retail traders. In the end, this token will quietly fade from everyone’s view, as if it never existed.
If you’re unlucky and happen to be holding a token with this pattern, what should you do? Don’t hope for a V-shaped recovery.
A more realistic move: watch the market closely, and the moment there’s any decent rebound, cut your losses and get out. Salvage what’s left of your capital and move it to assets with healthy trends and solid trading volume. Holding on? That’s just letting your losses eat away at your funds and judgment like cancer.
Everyone who survives in this market for the long term understands one core principle: knowing what not to do. Actively avoid obvious death traps, and your survival odds are already better than most.
Remember this: your job isn’t to rescue every crashing token, but to protect your principal and patiently wait for clear, genuine trading opportunities that are truly yours.