$BSB Today we saw a textbook-level 'ground' with a nearly 40% drop in a short time. Strangely, the contract positions surged by 10.7%. This divergence signal of a price crash combined with a spike in contract volume means either the bears are doubling down or the bulls are holding on for dear life and averaging down.
I haven't touched this coin, but I've kept it in my watchlist as a market indicator. Such extreme volatility coupled with high leverage can lead to liquidation in the blink of an eye if the direction is misjudged. Controlling your hands is way tougher than controlling your mouth #美伊波斯湾交火
$PEPE #以太坊基金会再次向Bitmine出售ETH Just like predicted yesterday, we're seeing some sideways action around 39-40. Pepe is definitely going to have a pump; a big green candlestick is in the cards, currently building up strength for a breakout.
My entry suggestion is to go long around 39-38, and then short near 40, just grab a slice of that consolidation zone and bail! Of course, you can also play the breakout; once we see 3-5 candles above 40, you can feel safe. If it shoots up and down, then it's a no-go.
I opened a breakout position at 49; I'm still holding it even though I'm in the red, but I've recouped a lot of costs over the past few months! To sum it up, this experience teaches you that with breakout trades, patience is key—don't let emotions drive your decisions!!!
Big Bro Ma Ji (Huang Li Cheng) had a classic "high-leverage rollercoaster" script on Hyperliquid this year:
January-February: High volatility and liquidation
He maintained a 25x long position on ETH at the start of the year, holding over 10,000 coins at one point. With the market pullback, he faced a series of liquidations in late February, suffering a single loss exceeding $700K, with total losses nearing $30 million.
March: Death spiral and bottoming out
Entering March, he was caught in a cycle of "top up - go long - get liquidated." On March 26, when ETH dropped to around $2080, his position got completely liquidated again, with Q1 cumulative losses hitting a staggering $75 million.
April: Counterattack and profit-taking
April became a turning point. He re-entered a 25x long position at a lower price and also went long on BTC and HYPE. As the market rebounded, he achieved 13 consecutive wins, making over $1 million in a single week, and placed profit-taking orders around $2400 for ETH, temporarily stepping away from the title of "King of Liquidation."
Style summary: Throughout the year, he stubbornly held a 25x leverage, ignoring pullbacks and heavily going long on ETH, recently dabbling in meme coins (HYPE) for speculation. This "Martingale" style of increasing positions did recover in April, but it's extremely risky—do not imitate. #美参议院禁止参议员参与预测市场交易 $HYPE
Market Sentiment: Bearish 75% extreme longs + large buy orders didn't hold + last two candlesticks dumped, price below UTC open
Order Reference
Short: $83.50–$84.00 for a bounce with low volume entry, stop loss $85.70, target $81.40–$81.80 Long: $81.40 stabilize and volume entry, stop loss $80.20, target $83.00
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The above is for market reference only and does not constitute investment advice, please manage your positions and stop losses carefully. BTC broke below $77K
[Pixels Deep Dive: Understanding the Price Life and Death of $PIXEL through the Behavior of 1 Million Farmers]
A lot of bros have been grinding in Pixels for half a year, making gains, taking losses, and in the end, it just boils down to 'luck' or the 'macro environment.' But after tracking data for months and breaking down tokenomics, behavioral psychology, and on-chain contracts, I've realized that the price fluctuations in this market are anything but random—it's a highly predictable collective game of 'human nature' and 'information asymmetry.' If you want to actually cash in on Pixels Chapter 4 or after the Ronin L2 migration, you need to grasp these three underlying value logics. 1. Behavioral Arbitrage: Who's selling 'wait time' on the cheap?
Brothers, stop getting brainwashed by the logic that 'high consumption = price up.' I've been eyeing the data on the Ronin chain for a week and found that most of the so-called consumption in Pixels isn't actually a burn, but just a transfer. 📊 Breakdown of three types of consumption: Actual burns: Must be sent to the 0x0...dead address. Currently, there are no large-scale burn records in the main contracts. Entering the Treasury: The coins you spend to upgrade land or buy points just go back to the official wallet. This is 'temporary locking,' and they could re-enter the market as rewards anytime in the future. $USDS Player P2P transfers: The transaction tax and rent are just tokens moving from newbies who don’t understand pricing to seasoned players who know how to arbitrage. 🔍 Key Insight: The price fluctuations of PIXEL are not random; they are the collective behavior of a million farmers. When newbies sell materials, they are essentially selling their 'waiting time' at a cheap price. The divergence between land NFTs and token prices often signals that deep players are cashing out or that big players are entering the game. ⚠️ Risk Warning: On May 12, Ronin migrates to L2. Although inflation will drop below 1%, if DAU (Daily Active Users) doesn’t increase, even the best underlying architecture will be a ghost town. Especially the Trust Score mechanism; it’s not a bug, it’s risk control. If your score is low, no matter how tempting the sell-off is, you won’t be able to catch it. The pop-up will directly block your trading permissions. This is for research purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel $RUNE
"I tracked the price movements of Pixels land NFTs and the $PIXEL token, discovering that the divergence between the two coincides with the most information-dense time windows"
Guys, last week when ETH was around $2384, I stumbled upon something in the Pixels-related data that made me sit up straight: The price of the $PIXEL token is rising, but during the same period, the average transaction price of Pixels land NFTs is dropping. These two numbers should be moving in tandem — theoretically, the better the gaming ecosystem, the more valuable the tokens become, and the land NFTs should also appreciate. But they moved in the opposite direction. I've been eyeing this divergence for a while: When the token price and land NFT prices diverge, who's telling the truth? 📊 Fundamental data: I checked two price series and found their correlation to be much weaker than I expected.
Hey fam, stepped out for a smoke today and didn't hit up Pixels. But I can't shake off the last time I jumped into the game: the wheat was all just looping textures, the characters had no shadows, and I was out there pulling weeds, all alone. Back then, I thought it was a bug, but now I reckon it might not be a design flaw, but rather a people problem. Decrypt just reported that Forgotten Runiverse shut down on Ronin, and Xociety also pulled the plug on Sui. The reason's the same: funds pulled out, players vanished. $PIXEL has dropped 99% from its peak in March 2024, $AXS is in the same boat, and $IMX is down 98%—this isn't just a Pixels issue; the whole blockchain gaming scene is retreating. $ZRO The fundamentals are indeed working. Ronin migrated to Ethereum L2 on May 12, with RON inflation dropping from 20% to under 1%, but it cost 10 hours of downtime. Yet back in 2021, Axie Infinity had millions of daily active users, the infrastructure wasn’t this solid, but players were everywhere. A solid foundation isn't enough to keep players around now. 30 days post-migration on May 12, I'm only watching if DAU has gone up. If it has, it means new blood is coming in; if not, this plot of land is just me farming solo. Do you think Pixels will make a comeback after the migration, or is it completely done for? Let me know in the comments! $BICO This is not investment advice; trading carries risks. Data source: Decrypt & Ronin official blog. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel
"The majority of people in Pixels saying 'consumption of $PIXEL' is just moving tokens from one pocket to another"
Guys, last week when ETH was hovering around $2384, I saw a statement in Discord that made me decide to really dive into something I had never considered before: "The consumption of $PIXEL is high, with strong deflationary pressure; I'm bullish in the long run." I didn't push back at the time because I wasn't sure if he was right or not. But I realized I've never seriously thought about a more fundamental question: Is the 'consumption' of $PIXEL about tokens disappearing forever, or are they just changing hands? These two aspects have drastically different impacts on the long-term value logic of $PIXEL .
Hey guys, around 3 PM this afternoon, someone in the group dumped an order for 8,500 $PIXEL at a market price of $0.0082, which comes to nearly $70. I just happened to have some idle PIXEL I wanted to swap for stablecoins, so I went straight for it. "Account anomaly, temporary trading restriction." Just a few minutes earlier, I had executed a test trade without any issues. In those few minutes, I got stuck. My hands were a bit shaky, switched to another wallet, and the fees were outrageous. In the end, that trade went south. $FLOKI It’s not just about the $70. It’s that feeling of "the meat is right in front of you, but a pop-up stops you"—it’s really frustrating. Later, I looked into it and found out it’s related to the Trust Score. The reputation system of Pixels affects withdrawal limits and trading permissions—if your Score is low, the platform's risk control kicks in, it’s not a bug, it’s the mechanism. The longer and more seriously you play, the higher your Score, and the fewer pop-ups you encounter. Account age accumulates daily, and bot accounts can’t farm it. Ronin migrated to Ethereum L2 on May 12; gas fees will drop, and the cost for new players will shrink, but the Trust Score starts from zero. That door that blocked me, new players can’t get through either. $MOVR I’m only watching one number: whether the DAU really increases in the 30 days post-migration. Have you ever been stopped by the platform's risk control? What was that like? Share in the comments! This doesn’t constitute investment advice; trading involves risks. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel
Newbies in the Pixels market aren't selling materials, they're selling time—and time has always been priced cheap.
Guys, last week when ETH was around $2384, I spotted something in the Pixels market that had me glued to the screen for a while. I saw a listing price that was way too low to be legit. I habitually checked the seller's account—guild level low, gear almost default, no rare items that only seasoned players would have. I thought it was just a one-off, didn't think much of it. Then the next day, the same thing happened, different materials, different account, but the same traits: newly registered accounts, listings below the market median price. Third day, here we go again.
Brothers, today I helped a friend debug some code, watched for two hours, and when the bug was fixed, he stood up and high-fived me. I got home, opened Pixels, and stuffed a Verdant Yieldstone into Seedwrights' Hearth. One health bar down. Then a player from the other side messaged me: "Did you add Wildgroves?"$CHZ Not to roast me, but to see if I wanted to team up for the next round. I just sat there stunned. This act of sabotage, the officials call it sabotage, but the reward pool is contributed by all Unions together—every wrong stone you drop adds rewards for everyone. Ronin is migrating to Ethereum L2 on May 12, and the RON inflation dropped from 20% to below 1%. PIXEL has plummeted 99% since its peak in March 2024, and that's real. I'm only watching one number: whether the DAU on Ronin Explorer increases in the 30 days post-migration.$AAVE
Which Union did you join? Have you sabotaged the opponents yet? Let’s hear it in the comments! This does not constitute investment advice; trading involves risks. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel
The price fluctuations of Pixels aren't random — they're the result of the collective behavior of a million farmers.
Hey guys, last week when ETH was around $2384, I stumbled upon something that made me rethink the entire Pixels market: The price lows and highs in this game aren’t random — they appear predictably based on the daily behaviors of a million farmers. I gathered all the observations from my previous eleven posts and tried to tackle a question I’ve never seriously considered: Why do material prices always dip at certain times and spike at others? The answer isn’t in the code or the official design — it’s in the behavioral patterns of the farmers.
Brothers, today I was helping a friend debug some code, and there were a ton of error messages. I stared at it for two hours and finally figured out that the variable name on the first line was misspelled. After fixing it, I checked the news and saw that Ronin is transitioning to Ethereum L2 on May 12th, with RON inflation dropping from 20% to below 1%. I took a look at the PIXEL's charts. $1MBABYDOGE From its peak in March 2024 to now, it has plummeted 99%. I sat there staring at that number for a while. The inflation is set to drop, the architecture is getting an upgrade, and the mainnet will be down for 10 hours on migration day—those are all facts. But the 99% drop has already happened, and that's a fact too. It’s not that the migration is useless. DAU broke 1.2 million, Chapter 3 Union added a destruction mechanism, and the Stacked AI rewards are now settled in USDC to reduce selling pressure. Pixels itself is still alive and iterating. But my friend's code, after fixing the first line, still had over thirty error messages waiting. $POL After the migration on May 12, the only number I'm looking for is: did the DAU increase in the following 30 days? If it goes up, it means new users are coming in; if it doesn’t, it indicates that while the upgrade was made, the same players are still in the game. Do you think DAU will rise after the migration? Share your thoughts in the comments! This does not constitute investment advice; trading carries risks. Data source: Decrypt & Ronin Official Blog. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel
"I Started Positioning 72 Hours Before the Pixels Limited Time Event—Almost Got My Gains Snatched Away"
Guys, last week when ETH was hovering around $2384, I was doing something that others thought was dumb but I later proved was right: After the Pixels event announcement dropped, I didn't rush into the game—I first checked the records from the last similar event, then started stacking up on materials. This move had me watching the price of that batch of materials double in the first hour after the event kicked off. But the story didn't end there—my buy volume wasn't enough, and I still missed out on the best part. I sat down and thought long and hard: How short is the profit window for this event? How far in advance do I need to position myself to be considered early?
Brothers, today I pulled a bit of a shady move in Pixels. I shoved a Verdant Yieldstone into the opponent Union's Hearth. The operation was simple, just a couple of clicks. But watching their Hearth Health numbers drop, I couldn't help but chuckle—felt a bit guilty, but it was really satisfying. $BONK It's a legal mechanism. Chapter 3 is designed that way; you can honestly boost your own health or stick a wrong stone to wreck your opponent's furnace. The Hearth flames change color based on Union contributions, so you can easily read the battlefield. Each season has a maximum reward of 50,000 PIXEL; the more you contribute, the more you earn, and causing damage counts as contribution. I used to think farming games were just about planting and waiting for the harvest, quiet, therapeutic, with no enemies. Pixels Chapter 3 shattered that preconception. Now you have factions, opponents, and a legitimate reason to mess with others. This feeling is completely different from pure farming. Not to mention: $PIXEL dropped 13.8% in Q1 this year, Stacked AI rewards shifted to USDC settlement reduced selling pressure, but the unlock pressure is still there, can check on CoinGecko. $JUP
Which Union did you join? Have you ever wrecked an opponent's Hearth? Share your results in the comments! This is not investment advice; trading carries risks. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel
"Pixels is turning 'farms' into 'towns', but most players are still stuck in farming mode"
Fellas, last week when ETH was ranging around $2384, I pulled off something unexpected in Pixels: I haven't been grinding for four days straight. It's not that I lack energy; it's just that I found more entertaining things to dive into. I was playing another game within the Pixels ecosystem and met a fellow player in the public channel who also came here to "feel the vibe". We chatted for almost an hour, moving from game talk to the $PIXEL token logic, and then to his farming experiences in the real world. I've come to realize something: I don’t even know when I started treating Pixels like a town to explore, rather than a farm to work on.
Hey guys, today I helped a friend fix his computer. He said it was just a bit laggy. I opened Task Manager and saw a dozen processes running in the background, and he couldn't name a single one. I asked him what he installed, and he said he didn't know, just clicked and installed whatever. After fixing it, I casually showed him Pixels. He was about to wave it off—he didn't get Web3 stuff. I didn't explain; I just let him try it out. Eight minutes later, he was asking me how to plant on the second plot. $CRV I looked at him. It took me half an hour to sort out that pile of processes, and he got into Pixels in just eight minutes. Blockchain ownership is hidden behind the scenes—the real barrier is whether it's fun or not. DAU broke 1.2 million, with economic reforms launching in Chapter 4 in 2026 to tackle inflation; it’s not just about pumping and dumping, it’s about having fun. I have to say: $PIXEL dropped 13.8% in Q1 this year, and the unlocking pressure is still there—check it on CoinGecko. The game is free, and $PIXEL is the governance token; the demand for holding it isn't as rigid as you might think. Do you have any non-Web3 friends who got pulled into Pixels? What was their first reaction? Let’s hear it in the comments! $FLOW
This does not constitute investment advice; trading involves risks. DYOR. @Pixels $PIXEL #pixel