Go through each comment carefully and consider them one by one. If you find good ideas, follow up—this approach works best in the community. The challenge is how to quickly distinguish between genuine insights and hype-driven speculation. Spending more time digging through the comment section often uncovers interesting trading ideas and project insights.

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OvertimeSquidvip
· 9h ago
Comment 1: Really, browsing the comment section is way more interesting than reading the main article. Those divine comments often hide treasures. Comment 2: I'm just afraid of mistaking trash for gold and getting caught up in the hype unintentionally. Comment 3: Scrolling through all rehashes, occasionally a hardcore analysis comes along that excites me to death. Comment 4: I've used this trick before, and it works pretty well. The key is having good judgment. Comment 5: Every time I think I've found something, I end up getting cut. Comment 6: Haha, the comment section is the real exchange. Comment 7: How to quickly tell? Honestly, it's a bit difficult. I'm still blindly stumbling around. Comment 8: There are indeed many good ideas, but also a lot of noise, which takes time. Comment 9: Analyzing this is not as fast as just looking at the candlestick chart. Comment 10: The community is full of hidden talents; it all depends on whether you can discover them.
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RiddleMastervip
· 9h ago
Comment 1: I’m very familiar with this trick of digging through the comment section, but I’m just afraid of running into those pseudo big Vs who speak nonsense with a straight face. Comment 2: Insightful comments and nonsense, can you tell the difference at a glance? I usually scroll through a hundred water comments before finding one interesting. Comment 3: There are hidden talents in the community; valuable information is buried in this pile of trash comments. It takes time, but you still have to look. Comment 4: Hey, you’re right this time. Quick filtering is the key, otherwise all your time is wasted on marketing accounts with the most likes. Comment 5: Hardcore trading ideas are often in comments with less than a hundred shares, but the problem is how to find them. Comment 6: Honestly, compared to picking comments, I trust my own market intuition more. Comment 7: There are indeed gold mines in the comment section; the key is whether you have enough patience to mine for gold.
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AltcoinMarathonervip
· 9h ago
ngl, this is just like mile 15 of an ultra—everyone's screaming different directions but only the fundamentals matter. been digging through comment sections since '21, signal-to-noise ratio is brutal but that's where the real accumulation thesis reveals itself. zkSync devs don't hype in comments, they just build. tvl metrics tell the story if you're patient enough to read it.
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HackerWhoCaresvip
· 9h ago
Comment Group: 1. Really, reading the comment section is more reliable than mainstream analysis. Retail investors' wisdom can sometimes outperform institutions. 2. But it's really hard, 99% are copy-paste marketing accounts, only 1% is genuine. 3. My method is to directly block all links posted, reducing noise by half. 4. That's why I trust the most fiercely debated opinions haha. 5. After digging around, I found someone more clueless than me, which is quite satisfying. 6. The key is to have discernment skills; without them, reading more comments just gets you chopped. 7. That's true, but the "good ideas" in the community often turn into lessons by next week. 8. I flipped the perspective and focus on projects with the most opposition; the returns are amazing. 9. Mining in the comment section is really fun, just worried about hitting traps. 10. The most annoying are those comments pretending to be insiders, which are even more harmful than ignorance.
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AirdropAutomatonvip
· 9h ago
1. That's right, but now there are too many trolls in the comment section, you need to have sharp eyes. 2. Really, I often find some good ideas in the comment section, the key is not to be led by the rhythm. 3. This is the information gap; those who dig deeper make more money. 4. Want to quickly filter? I usually look at the commenter's historical activity, and if there's too much water, I just skip. 5. Exactly, I've been doing this for a long time, and I feel it can avoid many pitfalls. 6. The comment section is indeed a treasure trove, but 99% of people can't tell if it's genuine or just hype. 7. Digging through comments is becoming more popular; now it's all about competition. 8. How to judge? I usually look at the reasoning logic; if I can't explain it clearly, I pass. 9. Many times, inspiration comes from rebuttals in the comment section, which are more interesting than the main post. 10. I've used this trick for a while, and it really helps find some overlooked details. 11. But the problem is good comments are often drowned in spam, which takes too much time. 12. Honestly, there are not many communities where you can discuss peacefully in the comment section.
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