This trend seems a bit ironic — more and more excess returns will gradually disappear. When the wave of large-scale automation sweeps in, only those who are inherently curious will truly remain amidst the ruins. These people are different. They are not chasing quick riches, but — understanding itself. Knowing how this thing operates, why it is designed this way, is their ultimate goal. They don't care about anything else; they just want to figure it out.
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TradFiRefugee
· 01-12 04:22
Can't keep going anymore, really. Luckily, I just want to figure out how this system works, and I gave up on getting rich quick a long time ago.
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BugBountyHunter
· 01-11 22:35
Bro, your words really hit me, honestly. I've long seen through those impatient and profit-driven folks; in the end, they are the ones who suffer the biggest losses.
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Understanding the operational logic is the right way; everything else is noise.
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The ironic part is that most people don't have the patience for that and only realize it after suffering losses.
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That's why I've been focusing on the details of contracts; while others are trading coins, I'm studying design flaws.
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Only those who can survive are truly such people; those who understand the essence will never be eliminated.
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If you're still betting on quick money now, you'll be shocked when automation really arrives.
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I really like this calm analytical perspective; setting aside an all-in mentality and studying quietly is the true way.
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BearMarketMonk
· 01-09 04:57
Curiosity is indeed the last moat.
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Ironically, most people never figure out what they are chasing until they die.
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Those who survive in the ruins are never relying on luck.
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Automation only kills those brains that can be replaced, no problem.
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There's nothing wrong with that, but few people persist.
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Understanding itself is valuable; everything else is just fragments of bubbles.
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Ultimately, the cycle depends on who can survive until the last spring.
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The more you go down, the clearer it becomes: excess returns are just an illusion.
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Figuring it out is a thousand times harder than getting rich quickly, which is why it's truly scarce.
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That's correct, but most people are even unwilling to start asking why.
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MEVSandwichMaker
· 01-09 04:57
Strongly agree, the retail investors are still chasing hot topics to make quick money, while the true winners have long understood the logic of the protocol layer.
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AirdropHunterXM
· 01-09 04:53
Can't keep pushing anymore, I still have to return to the basics.
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BearMarketMonk
· 01-09 04:50
Oh, you're so right. Making quick money is getting harder and harder, really.
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Automation is here, and those who just want to get rich overnight should have been finished long ago.
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Curiosity is the final barrier, I agree with that.
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Anyway, I just want to understand, everything else is nonsense.
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Mock if you want, but excess returns are just an illusion.
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The ones who truly make money are never those chasing the trend.
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Only those who understand the principles can survive; everyone else is just thinking like a leek.
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That's what I've been doing all along, understanding slowly, no rush.
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Honestly, curiosity can't be cultivated if your luck isn't good.
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Those who survive in the ruins are all weirdos, haha.
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¯\_(ツ)_/¯
· 01-09 04:33
Automation has arrived, and excess returns are gone, but truly successful people have actually been studying the underlying logic all along.
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GamefiGreenie
· 01-09 04:31
You really hit the nail on the head. I'm exactly the kind of bored-to-death player who spends every day digging through code to understand mechanisms, more addicted than making money.
This trend seems a bit ironic — more and more excess returns will gradually disappear. When the wave of large-scale automation sweeps in, only those who are inherently curious will truly remain amidst the ruins. These people are different. They are not chasing quick riches, but — understanding itself. Knowing how this thing operates, why it is designed this way, is their ultimate goal. They don't care about anything else; they just want to figure it out.