Can you get rich quick in crypto? Yes, but most people go about it the wrong way.
I'm not some financial big shot. I started with just a few thousand USDT—your typical retail investor background. Now my account balance is steadily over 50 million. Sounds like bragging, but that's really how I built it up step by step. My core logic is simple: don't bet it all for a 100x overnight; instead, with every opportunity, ask yourself—*is this one worth getting in on?*
Here's my actual path:
**Starting Phase: Small Funds, Building a Feel** With a 1,000 USDT starting capital, I split it into 5 parts, only using 200 USDT per trade. I always set stop-loss and take-profit points in advance for each order, never chase pumps or panic sell, and never stubbornly hold onto losing positions. I only trade markets I understand—if I don’t get it, I stay away.
**Growth Phase: Scaling Up with the Trend** When my account hit 10,000 USDT, I kept each position at about a quarter of my total funds. When I spotted a high-confidence trend, I’d build my position in batches, aiming for the middle of the move—not greedy for the top, not catching the bottom.
**Stabilization Phase: Locking in Profits** Once I broke 200,000 USDT, I started withdrawing a portion of profits every week. Not because I’m afraid of a market crash, but to avoid getting overconfident and making reckless trades. I only keep “money I can afford to lose” in my trading account, which keeps my mindset stable.
I’ve seen too many people blow up their accounts, usually for three reasons: chaotic position management, stop-losses in name only, and holding onto losing trades even when they’re right about the trend.
I had a friend who took 900 USDT to 18,000 USDT in three months—he was so excited to cash out, he called me at midnight and talked for almost two hours. These steady growth stories from small starting amounts are much more worth studying than those one-night-doubling, quick-bust tales.
At the end of the day, crypto isn’t a casino. You can chase high returns, but first, you have to learn how to survive.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
9 Likes
Reward
9
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ForkThisDAO
· 8h ago
Stop-loss orders are practically useless; this really hits hard. Everyone around me loses in the same way.
View OriginalReply0
MEVHunterWang
· 8h ago
Absolutely right, stop-loss is definitely not just for show.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationWatcher
· 8h ago
Sounds pretty sincere, but I've seen too many stories like this end up... never mind. The key is still discipline; most people fail because of those two words: "wait a bit."
View OriginalReply0
MeltdownSurvivalist
· 8h ago
Damn, it's the same theory again. Those who really make money never write down and share their methodologies, haha.
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingersFOMO
· 8h ago
It does sound stable, but I feel like most people simply can't achieve this.
Can you get rich quick in crypto? Yes, but most people go about it the wrong way.
I'm not some financial big shot. I started with just a few thousand USDT—your typical retail investor background. Now my account balance is steadily over 50 million. Sounds like bragging, but that's really how I built it up step by step. My core logic is simple: don't bet it all for a 100x overnight; instead, with every opportunity, ask yourself—*is this one worth getting in on?*
Here's my actual path:
**Starting Phase: Small Funds, Building a Feel**
With a 1,000 USDT starting capital, I split it into 5 parts, only using 200 USDT per trade. I always set stop-loss and take-profit points in advance for each order, never chase pumps or panic sell, and never stubbornly hold onto losing positions. I only trade markets I understand—if I don’t get it, I stay away.
**Growth Phase: Scaling Up with the Trend**
When my account hit 10,000 USDT, I kept each position at about a quarter of my total funds. When I spotted a high-confidence trend, I’d build my position in batches, aiming for the middle of the move—not greedy for the top, not catching the bottom.
**Stabilization Phase: Locking in Profits**
Once I broke 200,000 USDT, I started withdrawing a portion of profits every week. Not because I’m afraid of a market crash, but to avoid getting overconfident and making reckless trades. I only keep “money I can afford to lose” in my trading account, which keeps my mindset stable.
I’ve seen too many people blow up their accounts, usually for three reasons: chaotic position management, stop-losses in name only, and holding onto losing trades even when they’re right about the trend.
I had a friend who took 900 USDT to 18,000 USDT in three months—he was so excited to cash out, he called me at midnight and talked for almost two hours. These steady growth stories from small starting amounts are much more worth studying than those one-night-doubling, quick-bust tales.
At the end of the day, crypto isn’t a casino. You can chase high returns, but first, you have to learn how to survive.