The entire crypto world is a large-scale squid game. In fact, the entire financial market is a large game of plundering liquidity, whether it's the US stock market, BTC, or on-chain shitcoins. Do you think the US stock market reaching new highs year after year is not about plundering liquidity? In reality, the US stock market has plundered each of our liquidity through the inflation of the dollar.

Even if the on-chain liquidity is good, at the end of the final curtain cycle, perhaps only less than 2% of people will win, and the money they earn is from the other 98% of people, just like in the squid game, where the main character's final prize pool of 456 million was built on bodies. I believe this is already the game with the highest 'winning rate.' The winning rate for this round of secondary and contract trading must be even lower, as the on-chain has plundered the liquidity of the secondary market in this cycle.

Just like in the squid game, everyone in these on-chain games is sometimes a teammate and sometimes an enemy. But there’s no doubt that if you are alone, you will not survive to the end.

Group members showcase their skills in research, catching manipulators on-chain, technical analysis, and seeking inside information, all together looking for simple winning patterns to avoid harder pitfalls.

The competition between various Neiro sizes, eth vs sol hippos is like a tug-of-war match, a test of strength, where both sides unite all possible forces to fight for liquidity. The side that loses falls into an abyss.

The leaders of shitcoin groups and KOLs are like the heads of various small factions in the game. Some are experienced and teach newcomers survival skills, some think they have found the 'winning secret' and shout signals, and some are ruthless, only calling for liquidity exits and rug pulls, directly slaughtering the newcomers they lure in.

But no matter what, the game will eventually reach the final squid game level, where those who run first take the caps of others, depriving the liquidity of your 'teammates,' and the outcome is already determined; only less than 2% of people can win this game.

The choice to join or exit this game has always been in everyone's own hands, so even if you know you're playing the squid game, this time you have to choose between bread or a lottery ticket?