Market makers love testing those stop losses—but here's the twist: what if you just don't set one? It's wild watching the market try to hunt liquidations when you're already committed to holding. No stop loss means no trap to fall into. Sometimes staying stubborn beats getting shaken out at the worst possible moment. The real play isn't dodging the dips; it's just refusing to panic sell when the heat's on.
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GasFeeBeggar
· 01-19 05:23
Not setting a stop loss sounds great, but when the market crashes, you'll understand—it's a test of your mindset.
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SmartContractPlumber
· 01-18 22:20
Look at this theory... No stop-loss? Why not just throw the money into the water directly, save the trouble. In the broken contracts I've reviewed, large outflows caused by lack of permission control are the same kind of logic—it's all gambling with life.
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MEVHunterZhang
· 01-17 15:46
No stop-loss? This guy is really ruthless, just see who can hold out longer...
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GateUser-c799715c
· 01-17 14:58
No stop-loss? This move sounds exciting but also quite risky; it depends on whether your heart is strong enough.
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ForkThisDAO
· 01-16 06:03
No stop-loss? That's a gambler's mentality; you might end up going to zero directly.
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liquidation_surfer
· 01-16 06:01
No stop-loss? Bro, are you playing with fire or have you truly gained insight?
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ZkProofPudding
· 01-16 05:59
No stop-loss? This guy is really ruthless. I just don't have the guts for that.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-16 05:51
Going all-in without setting a stop-loss—this mentality is incredible. Let's see who has the strongest mental resilience.
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MissingSats
· 01-16 05:44
Not having a stop-loss sounds exciting, but going all-in and losing everything isn't really a good thing either.
Market makers love testing those stop losses—but here's the twist: what if you just don't set one? It's wild watching the market try to hunt liquidations when you're already committed to holding. No stop loss means no trap to fall into. Sometimes staying stubborn beats getting shaken out at the worst possible moment. The real play isn't dodging the dips; it's just refusing to panic sell when the heat's on.