MEVictim

vip
Age 5 Year
Peak Tier 1
Experienced sandwich attack survivor with PTSD from frontrunning bots. Now refuses to trade without private RPC endpoints. Slippage tolerance set to paranoid.
Honestly, I used to struggle with homework for hours, and now I just take a picture of the assignment and wait for the answer. Solving problems from photos is not magic at all, but the normal reality of 2026. Neural networks have advanced so much that they can recognize even my terrible handwriting and provide not just an answer, but a complete step-by-step explanation.
I tried a bunch of services. Photomath is a classic, especially if you need math. Fast, clear, but a paid subscription is expensive. Wolfram|Alpha I liked more for complex formulas and graphs. Mathway is also good, but it recog
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I've noticed that in the crypto community, the word "worker" is often used, but it actually refers to regular hired people for specific tasks. It seems like a simple word, but behind it is a whole system of interaction.
A worker is essentially a hired employee who takes on a certain job by agreement. The term comes from English, but the Russian-speaking crypto community has long since adopted and actively uses it. Usually, these guys work in teams of crypto enthusiasts when something specific needs to be done.
When I was figuring out how this works, I understood a simple scheme: there is an in
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I noticed some interesting statistics about the world’s economies. It turns out that the world’s poorest countries by GDP per capita in 2025 show just shocking figures. South Sudan leads this sad ranking with $251 per person, then Yemen ($417), and Burundi ($490). This is really a catastrophic level.
It turns out that most of the world’s poorest countries are concentrated in Africa. There too, the Central African Republic ($532), Malawi ($580), Madagascar ($595). Even the DRC with its huge natural resources is only ($743. Strange that with such wealth of mineral resources, the economy isn’t de
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When I first started trading, one pattern helped me most often to be right — it was the pin bar. Honestly, it’s the most understandable tool for beginners, and I still use it today. I’ll show how it works in practice.
I do this: I see a candle that first moves in one direction, then suddenly reverses. That’s the pin bar. It looks simple — a small body, one long tail, and almost nothing on the other side. The close happens near the edge, closer to the end of that tail. If the price was falling, then reversed upward and closed at the top — that’s a bullish pin bar. If the opposite — a bearish on
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The greed and fear index has dropped to 9 — it's just bottoming out. The last time this happened was during the FTX crash, and now we're back there again. A week ago it was at 16, a month ago at 42, so the decline has been just steep.
Today, Bitcoin touched $60K, then bounced back to $65K, but the current price is already higher — $71.5K. Despite the recovery, the greed and fear index remains at extreme levels, showing how panicked the market still is. People quickly shifted from caution to full protection.
The index is based on volatility, trading volumes, social signals, Bitcoin dominance, a
BTC1.08%
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Here's an interesting situation: more than a billion dollars has flowed into Bitcoin ETF funds, yet the BTC price seems to be frozen in place. Currently, it's trading around 73.3K, with minimal movement. It would seem that such an influx of capital should push the price upward, but it hasn't.
Analysts explain this with several factors. First, the inflow into ETF funds by itself doesn't mean new money entering the spot market — often, it's just a redistribution of existing positions. Second, institutional investors who buy through these funds usually act more cautiously, without sharp jumps. An
BTC1.08%
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Just listened to Powell’s speech after the Fed’s decision to cut the rate by 0.25 percentage points. And this is not what the bulls would have expected at all. The key point is that further rate cuts in December are by no means guaranteed. Powell said outright that this is not a predetermined scenario, and there are different views within the Fed regarding the future strategy.
The market understood that immediately. Bitcoin in the moment fell below $110,000; the correction low reached $109.2k. Then they bought back a little, and the price returned closer to $111k, but the mood clearly changed.
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Many beginners ask me what win rate actually is and why everyone pays so much attention to it. I'll answer simply: win rate is the percentage of your successful trades out of the total number of attempts. It sounds simple, but it’s one of the most misunderstood metrics in trading.
Here’s the formula you need to remember: take the number of profitable trades, divide by the total number of all trades, and multiply by 100. For example, over the course of a month you opened 50 positions. Of these, 30 were closed in profit and 20 in loss. Your win rate is (30 / 50) × 100 = 60%. Sounds pretty good,
BTC1.08%
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Martingale is one of the most discussed strategies in trading, and I often see beginners either idealize it or completely dismiss it. In reality, everything depends on how you apply it.
The essence is simple: you open a trade, it goes against you — you increase the next order. If you lose again — you increase even more. The idea is that when the price finally reverses, you not only recover your losses but also make a profit. Martingale trading originally came from casinos, where players doubled their bets after a loss. Traders adapted this idea to financial markets, and it stuck.
How does it w
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Recently, I noticed that crypto beginners often make one mistake—they don’t understand what liquidity in crypto is, and then they’re surprised that they can’t sell a coin at a good price. This is a basic thing you should understand before putting money in.
In general, liquidity is simply the ability to quickly exchange your crypto for another currency without the price jumping the wrong way. Imagine this: you want to sell Bitcoin, but if not many people are buying it, you’ll have to lower the price to find a buyer. That’s low liquidity. And when a lot is being traded, there’s always someone wi
BTC1.08%
ETH2.68%
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I've noticed that in the crypto community, deflation is often confused with inflation, even though they work completely differently. I decided to look into it more closely because it's important for understanding macroeconomics, which also affects digital assets.
In short: deflation is a decline in prices for goods and services. Sounds like a good thing, right? Money becomes stronger, and you can buy more for the same amount. At first glance, it seems ideal. But here’s the catch — when deflation persists, people start delaying purchases in anticipation of even lower prices. Demand drops, compa
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I remember when I used to run SETI@Home on my computer — it felt like I was helping to search for extraterrestrial life and earning passive income at the same time. But everything ended in 2021. The Berkeley project was shut down, and for several years, that background process has been gone. However, it turns out that wasn’t the only option. Now there’s a whole ecosystem of projects where you can earn money just by leaving your computer on.
The concept is simple — distributed computing. You take your PC, let it work on a network project, and in return, you get a reward. It’s like Airbnb, but i
FLK-5.35%
STORJ-0.8%
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I've noticed that many newcomers in crypto get confused with basic concepts. Let's clarify what the market cap actually means and why everyone pays attention to it.
Market cap is simply the product of the current price of a coin and the number of coins in circulation. It sounds simple, but it is one of the most important metrics for understanding the size of a project. Take Bitcoin as an example. With a price of around $69,000 and approximately 20 million coins in circulation, we get a market capitalization of about $1.38 trillion. This figure shows the actual market value of the asset.
Why is
FLOKI-1.67%
SHIB-0.17%
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I noticed an interesting trend in the crypto community — more and more discussions about dirty coins and exchange bans. Turns out, this is no longer just theory but a real headache for active traders.
The fact is, in 2025-2026, regulators really stepped up their oversight. Major platforms are required to comply with AML rules, and they do so very seriously — sometimes even too seriously. I've seen stories where people were blocked over a single suspicious transaction they didn't even notice.
According to statistics, about 5% of all stablecoin transactions are linked to suspicious addresses. In
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I've noticed that many newcomers to crypto often fall victim to the same scheme. A pump and dump is when a group of manipulators massively sell off an asset at an inflated price, causing panic and a sharp decline in value. But that's only half the story.
In reality, it all starts with a pump. First, a coordinated group begins buying the asset in large volumes, spreading false information, and creating hype on social media. The price soars, attracting beginners who think they’re missing out. Everyone starts buying. And once the trading volume is sufficient, the dump begins — that’s when they al
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Hello crypto community 🤝. Recently, I studied data on global currencies and noticed something interesting. It turns out there is a whole list of countries where national currencies have simply collapsed. These are not just numbers — behind them are real economic crises and financial shocks.
The weakest currency in the world right now is the Venezuelan bolívar. Can you imagine? One dollar is worth about 4 million bolívars there! Iran is also in a critical situation with the rial, where the dollar is quoted at approximately 514,000. These are just crazy figures. Laos, Sierra Leone, Lebanon — al
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Sideways trading is boring, I agree, but there's always something to work on in the charts 😏 Honestly, nothing serious is likely to happen before Monday. The weekends are usually as long as this entire range. Maybe it's better to just wait until the market decides where to jump? Are you also in wait-and-see mode or looking for opportunities in this boring situation?
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An interesting story about Dan Bilzerian, whom many know as the king of Instagram. The guy really looks like the embodiment of luxury, but where exactly his money comes from is a more complicated question.
Officially, Bilzerian’s net worth is estimated at over $200 million. Everyone is used to associating this with his legendary poker matches with crazy bets, but the picture is much more interesting. Yes, he plays poker, yes, he has the vape company Ignite International Brands, yes, he occasionally appears in movies. But the real source of his wealth is a completely different story.
It turns o
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It's interesting to analyze China's economic map. When it comes to the wealthiest city in China in terms of average income, Shanghai clearly leads — 83,000 yuan per capita, which is a whole different level. Immediately after it is Beijing with 85k yuan, while Shenzhen rounds out the top three with 81.1k yuan.
But what's really interesting is that besides these three giants, there is a whole group of cities that are seriously competing for attention. Guangzhou, for example, shows 77.8k yuan, Suzhou — 77.5k yuan, Hangzhou — 76.7k yuan. All of them are in the same weight category, with minimal di
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