Scrolling through Twitter in the early morning, I noticed that the founder of a certain exchange posted an update at 1:30 AM.
He mentioned a detail: that classic four-finger gesture was originally created by Spigg(SPIGG), and later he just directly imitated the move. The mentor-disciple relationship in the crypto space is indeed quite interesting.
Some people say this might hint at a new project about to take off, but then again, every tweet from a big shot gets interpreted in hundreds of ways. Let's stay rational—market trends come and go quickly, so don't just ape in based on a gesture.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 12-11 16:44
Posting a tweet at 1:30 AM? This guy's supply line is running low... Every time actions happen at this time, someone starts to imagine a new narrative. Hand gesture memes are everywhere, but what really determines the position still depends on on-chain data.
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Master-apprentice relationship is interesting, but the market doesn't care about that. Every tweet can be interpreted in hundreds of ways; I only look at trading volume to speak. Hot topics come and go quickly, and we haven't even figured out the direction of this round yet.
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Four-finger gesture... don't be fooled by these visual afterimages. I've been in a bear market for so long, and I've never seen "suggestions" that can guarantee holding a position. Be rational, survival comes first.
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Again guessing the big shot's body language? I advise everyone, instead of studying gestures, it's better to study stop-loss levels. You can't play these psychological market games.
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Posting a status at 1:30 AM is indeed strange, but I'm more concerned about the 24-hour turnover rate. Can hand gesture memes make prices rise? Then I should be able to take off dancing around for a while.
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TokenDustCollector
· 12-11 14:28
Still browsing Twitter late at night, truly has nothing to do哈
That move by SPIGG was really fierce, even imitations can turn into big things
Starting to interpret gestures again, this circle is really incredible, more mysterious than face reading
I'm just watching, don't ask me if I'm rushing or not
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CryptoMom
· 12-11 13:32
Ha, starting to interpret the gestures of the big shots again, this circle is really magical.
Wait, is SPIGG the originator? I just found out that everyone is just copying others.
Tweeted at 1:30 AM, probably another round of scammer frenzy is about to start. I'm not getting hyped anymore.
Gesture memes can be hyped for half a month, they really think we're fools.
Instead of staring at the fingers, better think about your own wallet, don't get wiped out.
Don't believe it, just watch and wait, most likely it will end up being another empty show.
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 12-09 21:55
Are tweets posted in the middle of the night always the prelude to big events? Is there really something this time, or are we in for another round of wild speculation?
The hand gestures from the big shots have all become codes—so funny.
It’s pretty rare for mentor-apprentice relationships to last this long in the space, but at this rate, in ten years every newcomer will need to learn how to decode hand signals.
Hand gestures hinting at new projects? Yeah right, they said that last time too and it turned out to be a false alarm.
Don’t ask, if you ask, the answer is “wait for the dump.”
If something really does come of this, I’d like to see it, but I’ll just watch from the sidelines.
Has tweet cryptography come up with something new again? This industry just keeps getting more surreal.
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ChainMaskedRider
· 12-09 21:54
The big shots who stay up late are at it again.
They can dig so deep even with a hand gesture meme—this space really is full of hidden talents.
Wait, why do I feel like the market is about to open again?
Hope it’s not another false alarm—I got burned last time.
As soon as the four fingers appear, everyone turns into a market analyst. Cracks me up.
The story of the master teaching the apprentice is interesting, but seriously, don’t just follow the crowd.
There’s always more to posts made late at night—it’s practically a rule.
People who blindly chase hand gestures really need to reflect.
The detail-oriented folks won this round, but it’s never the detail people who actually make money.
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CoffeeNFTrader
· 12-09 21:48
A big shot still tweeting at 1:30 AM, that’s really something. I was already asleep, haha.
Mentor-apprentice imitation is common in the crypto space, even hand gesture memes can be hyped up, hilarious.
Stop overanalyzing everything, it’s not some encrypted telegram. There are 800 versions just because people are bored.
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NFTFreezer
· 12-09 21:45
If you can spot these details just by reading tweets in the middle of the night, you must really have a lot of free time, haha.
That SPIGG gesture has been everywhere for ages, now everyone is learning it.
It’s the same old "hinting at a new project" narrative, this kind of hype happens every time.
Be logical and have evidence, don’t get brainwashed by hand gestures.
A single move from a big shot can spark ten research paper-level discussions, hilarious.
Nine out of ten "metaphors" on Twitter are just netizens overanalyzing things.
By the way, these mentor-apprentice relationships in the crypto world have indeed created quite a few phenomenal KOLs.
Wake up, the gesture is still the same, and the projects are still those projects.
There’s never a shortage of gossip in the crypto space, but rationality is the rarest thing.
This wave is going to get overinterpreted by airdrop hunters all over again.
Scrolling through Twitter in the early morning, I noticed that the founder of a certain exchange posted an update at 1:30 AM.
He mentioned a detail: that classic four-finger gesture was originally created by Spigg(SPIGG), and later he just directly imitated the move. The mentor-disciple relationship in the crypto space is indeed quite interesting.
Some people say this might hint at a new project about to take off, but then again, every tweet from a big shot gets interpreted in hundreds of ways. Let's stay rational—market trends come and go quickly, so don't just ape in based on a gesture.