You know what the worst loss strategy I’ve seen is? It's not slow hands, it’s not bad luck, it’s that mindset of 'just wait a bit longer, the price will go up more.'

Every day I log in to harvest, toss it all into storage, and then take a quick glance at the floor price—if it's low, I won't sell; wait a bit longer, if it drops even more, still won’t sell. In the end, either I hold on forever or I end up dumping everything, crashing my own price.

This isn't just a setup; this is making a wedding dress.

Let me tell you a true story. Last month, I dug through some big wallets and noticed a pattern: they never wait for the 'perfect sell point.' As soon as they get their hands on resources, they liquidate in three batches—70% at market price immediately, 20% with a slightly higher bait order, and 10% held back for emergencies or tasks. You think they’re not in a rush? They are. Their urgency comes from the fear of funds being locked up.

The Pixels ecosystem has a stark reality: the price curve of most resources isn't V-shaped; it's more like a Γ shape – the peak is right after launch, then it drops steadily, with occasional bounces that make you think spring has come, only to continue the descent.

The day you're waiting for might never come.

So the question isn't 'when to sell for maximum profit,' but have you thought it through – what will you do with $PIXEL after selling? Are you going to roll more resources, swap for rarer materials, or save up for the next big event? Whether to sell or not depends on your next move, not your mood today.

To put it bluntly, $PIXEL the main function here is lubrication. The faster the liquidity flows, the more profits you'll roll out at each stage. Holding onto resources is like letting your money take a nap on the floor – it can afford to sleep, but you can't.

Don't treat the market like your backyard storage. It's a marketplace; bustling in the morning, but by the afternoon, it's ghost town. #pixel @Pixels