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Just came across this solid divergence cheat sheet that actually makes sense of RSI patterns, and honestly it's a game-changer for spotting potential moves. Let me walk you through what I'm seeing here.
So basically there are two main buckets of divergence patterns you need to know about. First is regular divergence, which is your reversal signal. When price is making lower lows but RSI is making higher lows, that's regular bullish divergence telling you an upside reversal could be coming after a downtrend. Flip it around and you get regular bearish divergence where price makes higher highs while RSI makes lower highs, signaling a potential downside reversal after an uptrend.
Then there's hidden divergence, which is actually the opposite signal. This one tells you the trend is probably gonna keep going. Hidden bullish divergence shows price making higher lows while RSI makes lower lows, suggesting that uptrend will continue after a pullback. Hidden bearish divergence is when price makes lower highs but RSI makes higher highs, meaning the downtrend likely continues after the bounce.
The real value of this divergence reference is that it gives you a framework to distinguish between reversals and continuations. I've been using this divergence cheat sheet approach for a while now and it cuts through a lot of noise. Instead of guessing whether a move is a reversal or just a pullback, you've got actual RSI confirmation to back up what price action is telling you.
What I find most useful is recognizing when the divergence pattern is forming early. Once you understand how these price and RSI mismatches work, you start seeing them everywhere. The key is patience though, these patterns work best when they're clean and obvious, not when you're forcing them into marginal setups. If you're into technical analysis on Gate or anywhere else, having this divergence guide locked in your toolkit makes a real difference.