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$BIFI has created nearly 400 times the single-day increase from its $20 bottom, and the logic behind it is quite intriguing. Besides the project team manipulating the market themselves, it’s hard to imagine who else would do such a thing. A coin that has already been delisted, yet still pulls off this kind of move—rather than market behavior, it’s more like a premeditated big show of cutting the leeks. Why didn’t it pump during the dormant period before? Why choose to act after being delisted? This time gap itself reveals the problem.
The most infuriating part of such projects is that they claim to be the last salvation, but in reality, they are just the final wave of harvesting. Crypto enthusiasts get trapped at the top, while the project team has already prepared their escape plan. This routine is so rotten that it should be nailed to the shameful pillar.
But instead of anger, it’s better to learn from it. For any delisted coin, my advice is straightforward: don’t touch it. This isn’t about avoiding risk altogether, but about the fundamental risk-reward ratio being broken. What does delisting mean? It means market consensus has disappeared, liquidity has dried up, and once the whales target it, retail investors become passive chips. So those stories about “reviving delisted coins” are best just to ignore.
Surviving in the crypto world is the top priority. The short-term dream of getting rich quickly is tempting, but with limited capital, we need to be more rational. Every opportunity can come again, but once the principal is lost, it takes several times longer to recover. Instead of chasing high-risk, low-certainty rebounds of delisted coins, it’s better to focus on tracks with sufficient liquidity and stable consensus. Finding safe opportunities within limited funds is the right way to live longer.