The market maker can take you to the sky, but can also make you flip over instantly. The key is whether you can see through their rhythm.



Rather than passively following the trend, it's better to actively identify the true intentions of the main players. Here are five practical methods to help you catch abnormal movements earlier.

**1. Beware of the strange rise of "Slow Push Without Falling"**

Genuine main players never flaunt their accumulation. What is their routine? Gradually pushing the price to create a false impression of "continuous rise and no fall."

How to identify? Look at these points: consecutive small bullish and bearish candles alternating upward, each pullback stopping at key support levels, with trading volume gradually increasing but without sudden spikes. This lukewarm rhythm actually indicates funds are quietly building positions. Once you spot this pattern, it’s likely that big players are quietly accumulating.

**2. Seize the "Fake Drop and Shakeout" Escape Opportunity**

Main players are playing psychological warfare. They often suddenly dump the market to scare retail investors out, then quickly lift the price.

Details for recognition are crucial: first, a rapid decline, then an immediate recovery, leaving a long and obvious lower shadow. Meanwhile, trading volume at low levels suddenly explodes, but the price does not continue to fall. The candle finally stabilizes in the previous steady zone. This is the main players collecting chips amid market panic, and that lower shadow area is often the biggest opportunity.

**3. Observe the "Eerie Silence Before the Breakthrough"**

Before a major move, the market often falls into extreme calm. Bulls and bears exhaust each other, and no one can dominate.

Look carefully: volatility narrows sharply, trading volume shrinks to the lowest in recent weeks, and selling pressure above gradually diminishes. When a gentle volume-increasing attack appears, it’s a signal of initiation. This "accumulation" state often harbors a big trend.

**4. Follow the "Supportive Pullback" for Certainty**

What are the characteristics of the main upward phase? The main players will not easily let the trend break. They will perform a supportive pullback at key levels.

What’s the focus? The first pullback after a rise must stabilize quickly. During the correction, trading volume clearly shrinks, indicating no panic selling. Then, during the second attack, volume and price rise together with greater force. This usually means the main players are still maintaining the trend, and the market is far from over.

**5. Recognize the "Deceptive High Push" Warning Signs**

Not all rises are true breakouts; sometimes, the main players are just pushing up to offload. This is the most dangerous.

Watch out for these signs: after a volume breakout, a long bearish candle suddenly appears, swallowing the previous day's gains. High-volume continuous rises that fail to move higher, with obvious dispersion in chip distribution. This often indicates the main players are pushing high at the top to exit, and you must cut losses or reduce positions promptly.

**Final words**

The market is never a one-man game. Mainstream coins like SOL and BNB are even more battlegrounds for market makers. Rather than blindly chasing short-term gains, understanding the rhythm and intentions of the main players is the true secret to survival in this market. The path is already laid out, but every trader must learn to see the direction clearly.
SOL-1,12%
BNB-0,92%
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RuntimeErrorvip
· 10h ago
It sounds good, but who can see clearly at the critical moment? Anyway, I often get hammered so hard that I become numb. I've seen the slow push not work, and the result is still a complete collapse. These theories sound reliable but are all traps when put into practice. Is there an opportunity in the lower shadow zone? Uh... I usually buy during the lower shadow and then continue to dig down. Accumulation? By the time I react, it has already tripled. How can I chase it? The certainty of a rebound after a dip to support? Bullshit. Buy in and it keeps falling; sell out and it rallies. The last sentence is correct: the market is indeed not a one-man game. It's a game played by whales and retail investors. We are all tools.
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LiquidatorFlashvip
· 15h ago
It's the same old story, when trading volume explodes, the liquidation risk threshold is also skyrocketing. --- Supportive pullback? I've seen too many high-leverage accounts get liquidated the moment they try to "stabilize." --- Regarding the pump to chase high, I have to ask, have you calculated your leverage ratio? --- Five methodologies, but no one talks about the risk control mechanisms for lending positions, which is outrageous. --- SOL and BNB are indeed battlegrounds for whales, but they are also liquidation battlegrounds. Don't just watch the K-line; pay attention to the collateral ratio. --- "Seeing through the rhythm," the problem is that by the time you see through it, liquidity might already be gone. --- Recognizing signals is no problem; it's just that halfway through recognition, smart contracts can automatically liquidate your position. --- The period of shrinking trading volume sounds comfortable, but in a low-liquidity environment, stop-loss orders can slip with a 50% slippage in just one second. --- You're right, but the market isn't about understanding it and making money; leverage ratio is the most invisible knife.
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MetaverseLandlordvip
· 01-15 12:32
Basically, it's just gambling on the house's mindset; retail investors still lose money. It's the same old story, ultimately getting cut again. It sounds reasonable, but in reality, not a single one can be caught. SOL BNB has been played out long ago; entering now is just giving away your assets. It sounds convincing, but I've never made money. Feels like you're teaching me how to get harvested more clearly. I know all five tricks, but the market still makes me blow up in place. Understanding these actually makes you lose even faster; trust you, and you're done.
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RegenRestorervip
· 01-13 11:55
It sounds good, but how many people can truly see through it? I still think most people will end up getting cut after watching it.
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SatoshiNotNakamotovip
· 01-13 11:50
It's the same set of theories again, explaining everything in detail but I still got trapped... Seeing through the rhythm, how easy is it to talk about? It all sounds right, but when it comes to actual operation, the market makers change their tricks again, always one step behind. These five methods sound perfect when combined, but in reality, when has the market ever aligned with all of them? The market isn't that predictable. Honestly, rather than studying the market makers' tactics, it's better to think about how to survive longer. That wave of SOL, I saw through the "support" but still got liquidated. It's too difficult.
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GateUser-e87b21eevip
· 01-13 11:47
After saying all that, ultimately you still have to experience the feeling of being cut to truly learn...
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LightningLadyvip
· 01-13 11:43
Honestly, no matter how eloquently you put it, it all comes down to one word—gambling. See through the rhythm? I actually see through how the market makers will play me. Hey, but I did make a profit on that SOL move, and I'm still thinking about whether to chase BNB... Nah, I'm chicken.
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TaxEvadervip
· 01-13 11:39
It sounds nice, but it's still gambling. I just want to ask, how many people can really see through the house?
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NotSatoshivip
· 01-13 11:39
Another tutorial on "I Understand the Market Makers," sounds convincing, but when it comes to actual trading, you're still being manipulated. Pump and dump, market support, fake falls... they sound good, but in real trading, who can accurately identify them? Most people are just armchair strategists after the fact. Those who truly make money never share their secrets in communities; this is the first ironclad rule. Ultimately, you have to explore on your own; don't be too superstitious about rhythm theories. I also saw similar analyses during the SOL wave, but I still got crushed through it. People who share these things are often also losing money in their own accounts. Be clear about one thing: the market doesn't have absolute "insights"; it's all a game of probabilities. Instead of learning some identification methods, it's better to master stop-loss first.
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