Altcoins can indeed be played during a bull market, but the key is to understand the principles.



Having gone through two cycles of ups and downs, I’ve realized—those who truly grow their accounts are the ones who catch the right rhythm. Here are some practical ideas you can directly apply:

**Don’t foolishly wait for the so-called "golden entry price."** Once the trend kicks off, it’s unlikely to turn around easily. Those early pullbacks? Mostly opportunities to get in, not signals to exit. If you insist on catching the absolute bottom, you'll end up watching the market slip away.

**Diversifying your holdings is more reliable than concentrating your position.** Don’t pile all your chips into one basket. Spread across multiple tracks like public chains, AI concepts, blockchain games, DePIN infrastructure… When the market rotates, one will always be the first to take off.

**The biggest profit in a bull market comes from "holding steady."** Frequent trading will only cause you to sell too early, and it's even harder to re-enter after you exit. Less fussing, let the trend speak for itself.

**Follow the market sentiment, but act contrarily.** When everyone is bearish and no one dares to buy, that’s often when a big move is brewing. When everyone is shouting about gains and FOMO is rampant, it’s time to stay calm and watch. Be bold in uncertain times, stay sober when consensus is strong.

**Pullbacks are standard in a bull market, not signals of the end.** Several deep corrections will make you anxious during a bull run, each seeming like a crash. But if you hold assets supported by consensus and solid fundamentals, the dips often lead to new highs afterward. Don’t be quick to jump off.

Ultimately, the bull market rewards not the smartest but those who are right about the direction, willing to hold, and able to withstand volatility. Use position management instead of gambler’s mindset, and patience to fight anxiety.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 6
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
PumpDetectorvip
· 2025-12-13 16:53
nah this is just sentiment cycle 101, been calling these plays since mt gox era... the real move? watch where smart money actually sits during capitulation, not what twitter is screaming about
Reply0
SnapshotDayLaborervip
· 2025-12-11 03:54
Holding on truly is the hardest part; I always get stopped out by frequent trading. --- Distributing your holdings is spot on; I previously went all in on one coin and got trapped and wiped out. --- Waiting until the whole network is bearish to buy? Easy to say, but psychologically hard to get past. --- A bull market tests your mindset, not your technical skills—that's the truth. --- I believe in dips being a shakeout, but how to tell if it's just a shakeout or a real crash—that's the real challenge. --- It’s easier to choose the right direction, but holding on is the key—every time I rush to take profits, I watch others double their money. --- Frequent trading indeed costs fees and leads to missed opportunities; that’s my painful lesson. --- Entering during divergence and exiting during consensus—sounds simple, but actually doing it is really hard. --- That last statement was perfect—the gambler's mentality is the most toxic; managing your position size is the true key. --- The mentality of bottom fishing has caused many to fail; following trends is actually more stable.
View OriginalReply0
SellTheBouncevip
· 2025-12-11 03:53
Listen, listen, this set of theories sounds pretty smooth, but after several rounds of bear market baptism, I only believe in one thing: there’s always a lower point waiting for you. Frequent trading in and out to sell quickly? Give it a rest. Those who hold their positions until the end are actually the bagholders, just lucky enough to catch this rebound. When the next correction comes, all that "consensus support" is useless. Diversified allocation sounds safe, but in reality, it just平均分摊你的盈利. Instead of doing that, better to buy more after a dip; the market bottom will teach you how to start over. Selling on rebounds, I agree with that. As for the rest? Let’s wait and see, history always repeats itself.
View OriginalReply0
nft_widowvip
· 2025-12-11 03:49
The one always selling is me, and the one always buying the dip is someone else. --- Holding onto assets is really a huge challenge. I always say I’ll keep it simple, but I still get itchy hands. --- I’ve tried diversifying the portfolio, but the result was that everything fell at once haha. --- Waiting for consensus and staying clear-headed? Why do I always lose my mind when consensus comes? --- That’s right, but I still chase highs, I’ve come to accept it. --- The biggest fear is holding the right coin and then cutting losses during a pullback. How can I cure this disease? --- The premise of doing the opposite is that you need to have guts, which I don’t. --- "Let the trend speak for itself" – this phrase cured my itchy hands. --- This theory sounds great, but executing it is a different story. --- Getting the rhythm right sounds easy, but who can predict accurately in reality? --- The fundamental reason I can’t hold on is that my capital is too small; a single increase can be a major event.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleMistakervip
· 2025-12-11 03:42
Listening, listening, it feels like a storytelling, but to be honest, I still support diversification. Going all-in on a single coin is really just a gambler’s mentality. --- It's always the same reasoning, in the end, it still depends on luck. Anyway, I just burn money and pay tuition fees. --- Hold on? I’ve never held on. When it rises, I want to sell; when it falls, I want to cut losses. I’m practically a contrarian indicator for the market. --- Only enter when the whole network is bearish? I’ve tried that, but it just keeps falling, selling at a loss until I become numb. --- Easy to say, but when panic sets in, you forget everything and just want to quickly cut losses and run. --- I agree with the standard call for a pullback, but why does it always seem like this time really is the end? My mental resilience isn’t enough. --- Diversifying across sectors indeed prevents explosions, but if you pick wrong, it just results in evenly distributed losses—no sense of superiority. --- Not messing around, the market slips away; mess around, and the money slips away too. Anyway, it’s all losses. --- I’ve heard this set of theories a thousand times, but the problem is that when it’s time to execute, the mind starts to wander.
View OriginalReply0
MechanicalMartelvip
· 2025-12-11 03:37
Sounds good, but I think the idea of diversified holdings is too idealistic. When the market rotates, you haven't held onto any track.
View OriginalReply0
  • Pin