I've seen this happen too many times: an account grows from $1,000 all the way to a million, only to get wiped out completely because of one impulsive trade.
Roller-coaster trading—this extreme, all-or-nothing strategy—is a hundred times more thrilling than simply holding coins. You either take off instantly, or crash right back to square one.
There's a guy in the scene, had only $1,000 left for living expenses, but managed to turn it into $100,000 in three months with this method. The core is just three words: ruthless, precise, patient.
The method is actually pretty simple: 100x leverage, all-in with profits, stick to a single direction.
He started with 300u for practice, opening only $10 positions each time, maxing out leverage. Make 1% profit and you double up, take out half the earnings, roll the other half. The math doesn't lie—if you get it right 11 times in a row, $10 can turn into $10,000.
But why do 90% end up blowing up?
Because of human nature: - When making money, greed keeps you from stopping - When losing, you can't accept it and double down - Direction keeps shifting, and the market slaps you around
My own rules are cold to the point of being ruthless: Wrong direction? Cut losses instantly, no excuses. Wrong 20 times in a row? Forced to take a day off, don’t fight the market. Rolled up to 5,000u? Must withdraw, don’t let emotions fester.
Last year there was a major market move—I rolled $500 up to $500,000 in three days. Sounds awesome? But you didn’t see the four months I waited beforehand, watching like a cheetah stalking its prey until the trend was fully formed.
Roller-coaster trading was never about trading daily or staring at the screen all the time— It’s an extreme approach of “only striking hard when the opportunity is perfect.”
A lot of people now ask if it’s possible to keep rolling?
First, ask yourself three questions: Is the market volatility big enough? Is the direction clear, one-sided, and noise-free? Can you take just the middle chunk, without being greedy for the top or the bottom?
If all three are “yes”—go for it. If even one is “no,” then just watch from the sidelines. Otherwise, what you’re rolling isn’t your position size, it’s your mindset and your principal.
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ImpermanentLossFan
· 12-11 15:16
杠杆就是毒药
Reply0
LiquidityNinja
· 12-11 04:07
Closing positions is the story of nurturing new retail investors
View OriginalReply0
ChainSherlockGirl
· 12-10 21:06
Human weaknesses are always fatal
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-5854de8b
· 12-09 10:52
I don't dare to try those god-level strategies.
View OriginalReply0
SilentObserver
· 12-09 10:47
Impulsiveness is indeed the most dangerous.
View OriginalReply0
SocialFiQueen
· 12-09 10:39
Anyone who is greedy will definitely GG.
View OriginalReply0
ConfusedWhale
· 12-09 10:37
A bunch of retail investors are still getting wiped out.
I've seen this happen too many times: an account grows from $1,000 all the way to a million, only to get wiped out completely because of one impulsive trade.
Roller-coaster trading—this extreme, all-or-nothing strategy—is a hundred times more thrilling than simply holding coins. You either take off instantly, or crash right back to square one.
There's a guy in the scene, had only $1,000 left for living expenses, but managed to turn it into $100,000 in three months with this method. The core is just three words: ruthless, precise, patient.
The method is actually pretty simple:
100x leverage, all-in with profits, stick to a single direction.
He started with 300u for practice, opening only $10 positions each time, maxing out leverage. Make 1% profit and you double up, take out half the earnings, roll the other half. The math doesn't lie—if you get it right 11 times in a row, $10 can turn into $10,000.
But why do 90% end up blowing up?
Because of human nature:
- When making money, greed keeps you from stopping
- When losing, you can't accept it and double down
- Direction keeps shifting, and the market slaps you around
My own rules are cold to the point of being ruthless:
Wrong direction? Cut losses instantly, no excuses.
Wrong 20 times in a row? Forced to take a day off, don’t fight the market.
Rolled up to 5,000u? Must withdraw, don’t let emotions fester.
Last year there was a major market move—I rolled $500 up to $500,000 in three days. Sounds awesome? But you didn’t see the four months I waited beforehand, watching like a cheetah stalking its prey until the trend was fully formed.
Roller-coaster trading was never about trading daily or staring at the screen all the time—
It’s an extreme approach of “only striking hard when the opportunity is perfect.”
A lot of people now ask if it’s possible to keep rolling?
First, ask yourself three questions:
Is the market volatility big enough?
Is the direction clear, one-sided, and noise-free?
Can you take just the middle chunk, without being greedy for the top or the bottom?
If all three are “yes”—go for it.
If even one is “no,” then just watch from the sidelines. Otherwise, what you’re rolling isn’t your position size, it’s your mindset and your principal.