Li Mo is a marginal programmer at an internet company, earning 8,000 a month, living in a single room in a village within the city. After following the trend of buying contracts and losing all his savings from three years, he was dumped by his girlfriend and laughed at by his colleagues, and he is almost unable to pay the rent. That night when Bao Er Ye's 'Distant Ocean Fishing' scandal went viral, he was squatting on the balcony eating instant noodles, watching the panic in the cryptocurrency circle on his phone, with ETH plummeting 18%, and exchanges freezing a large number of accounts overnight, while retail investors cried as they sold at a loss.
No one knows that three years ago he helped an anonymous big shot fix a blockchain vulnerability. The other party didn't pay him but instead gave him 100,000 worthless 'garbage coins' XEC, saying, 'Just in case it's useful.' This coin has been hovering around $0.0001 for years and is mockingly referred to in the industry as 'air among air coins.' He had long forgotten it in his cold wallet.
On the third day of panic spreading, XEC suddenly released an announcement: the team is an overseas compliance team, which has long connected to decentralized wallets, unaffected by cross-border investigations, and will destroy 90% of the circulating supply, anchoring to offline computing power assets. Once the news broke, XEC skyrocketed from $0.0001 to $2.3.
Li Mo trembled as he opened the dusty cold wallet, with 100,000 coins quietly lying inside. He sold them in batches and made a net profit of 2.1 billion after deducting fees. When he wore a custom suit and paid off the funds for a large apartment in the city center in one go, his ex-girlfriend urgently sent a message asking to get back together. He only replied: 'What you said back then, “the crypto world is all a scam,” I believed it, but luck is on my side.' Now he has quit his job, established a blockchain security fund, and has become a low-key 'redemption boss' in the circle.@男神说币 #比特币与黄金战争 $BTC

$ETH
