Meme coins can make money, but the key is having the right tools and information sources.
Recently, I saw an interesting case—someone used on-chain scanning features to catch a project that went from $1131 in its early days to $4948, a more than 4x increase. This is not luck, but using the right methods at the right time.
Doing Meme coins is like this: whoever can discover opportunities on-chain faster will seize the advantage. Many people miss out on explosive projects not because the projects aren’t good enough, but because their information is delayed. When you see it on Twitter, others have already started positioning on-chain.
That’s also why more and more traders are beginning to use on-chain tools to uncover opportunities. By directly observing fund flows, project popularity, and contract activity on the blockchain, they bypass traditional information gaps. Either you have channels, or you learn to use tools.
To survive in this space, you must: first, track reliable data sources; second, establish your own judgment criteria; third, maintain disciplined execution without following the crowd. Opportunities in Meme coins do exist, but so do real risks. Tools can help you find opportunities, but they can’t take on the risks for you.
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LeverageAddict
· 39m ago
Information asymmetry is a matter of life and death, and that's correct. But those who truly make money are always the ones with tools; retail investors can't outpace on-chain bots no matter how fast they are.
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A fourfold increase sounds great, but that's just survivor bias. Why does no one mention those who lost money?
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In the end, you still need to establish your own judgment criteria; otherwise, no matter how fast your tools are, they can't save you.
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Having the right tools can indeed help you detect opportunities early, but the hardest part is maintaining disciplined execution, especially when you see a surge and want to go all-in.
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Twitter is always the last line of defense; on-chain data is the real deal. I've understood this principle long ago, but the key is how to interpret on-chain data.
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Risk always feels more real than opportunity, and this statement hits the mark.
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Tools are effective, but there are too many people using them. Is there still gold to be mined now?
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MetaMisery
· 9h ago
It sounds nice, but isn't it just about whose information source is faster
On-chain tools are indeed useful, but the people who are truly making money have already jumped on board
The section on risks is well-written, at least it's not deceptive
The hardest part now is how to find real opportunities among so many fake projects
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ParanoiaKing
· 12-26 21:52
Information asymmetry is the line between life and death; those without tools are just getting by.
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0xSleepDeprived
· 12-26 21:51
To be honest, someone still needs to point me in the right direction, or else constantly watching the market will just ruin my brain.
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SignatureDenied
· 12-26 21:32
Basically, it's still a game of information asymmetry; whoever reacts faster gets the benefits.
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MentalWealthHarvester
· 12-26 21:29
No matter how good this tool is, it can't save those who follow the trend without thinking.
Meme coins can make money, but the key is having the right tools and information sources.
Recently, I saw an interesting case—someone used on-chain scanning features to catch a project that went from $1131 in its early days to $4948, a more than 4x increase. This is not luck, but using the right methods at the right time.
Doing Meme coins is like this: whoever can discover opportunities on-chain faster will seize the advantage. Many people miss out on explosive projects not because the projects aren’t good enough, but because their information is delayed. When you see it on Twitter, others have already started positioning on-chain.
That’s also why more and more traders are beginning to use on-chain tools to uncover opportunities. By directly observing fund flows, project popularity, and contract activity on the blockchain, they bypass traditional information gaps. Either you have channels, or you learn to use tools.
To survive in this space, you must: first, track reliable data sources; second, establish your own judgment criteria; third, maintain disciplined execution without following the crowd. Opportunities in Meme coins do exist, but so do real risks. Tools can help you find opportunities, but they can’t take on the risks for you.