Listening to a few veteran players mention the situation of $SENT, the cost is around $100+, and this trade indeed carries significant risk. To put it simply, it's about holding a stable appreciating currency and adding some funds to gamble on a potentially scammy new project—this logic itself is flawed.
What everyone truly trusts is never a new coin, but those projects that have undergone strict review and have real ecological support. The previous case of project failure is right in front of us—if you don't sell quickly enough, you could lose everything in minutes. Retail investors want to sell at the high point precisely? The chances are very slim. A more realistic scenario is that the project starts to decline immediately after launch, and many people lose their principal before they can react.
$SENT's TGE hasn't even officially started yet and has already dropped sharply, making further decline quite likely. Instead of holding onto false hope, it's better to exit early. Ultimately, the project's review mechanism needs to be more rigorous to better protect the rights of ordinary investors.
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MindsetExpander
· 12h ago
To be honest, I've seen this $SENT routine many times, it's just another "high risk, high reward" gimmick.
It's another "break-even" scam, and are there really people willing to take the bait?
Falling this much before TGE, how can it be played afterward... Instead of waiting to die, better to run away.
Retail investors will never make quick money, this is an ironclad rule.
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RumbleValidator
· 12h ago
I've seen too many projects break below the price, and the verification data is right here — 90% of new tokens are cut in half within 72 hours after TGE. $SENT this wave has no reliable node consensus foundation to support it at all, and the risk premium is directly maxed out.
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TopBuyerForever
· 12h ago
It's the same story again, new coins are always the paradise for bagholders.
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Fren_Not_Food
· 12h ago
I actually saw it coming a long time ago. This kind of new project is just a game of chance; you can't beat the project team at their own game.
Honestly, risking over 100U on a failed project is a gamble I never take.
Aren't there plenty of cases of depegging? Last time, those who got in early were definitely cut.
It's already fallen this much before the TGE even started; how can it possibly rebound later?
Instead of waiting to be further exploited, it's better to withdraw everything now. We've had enough painful lessons.
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TommyTeacher1
· 12h ago
Yet again, a new project is rug-pulling. I just don't believe anyone would really go all-in with 100U on $SENT.
Listening to a few veteran players mention the situation of $SENT, the cost is around $100+, and this trade indeed carries significant risk. To put it simply, it's about holding a stable appreciating currency and adding some funds to gamble on a potentially scammy new project—this logic itself is flawed.
What everyone truly trusts is never a new coin, but those projects that have undergone strict review and have real ecological support. The previous case of project failure is right in front of us—if you don't sell quickly enough, you could lose everything in minutes. Retail investors want to sell at the high point precisely? The chances are very slim. A more realistic scenario is that the project starts to decline immediately after launch, and many people lose their principal before they can react.
$SENT's TGE hasn't even officially started yet and has already dropped sharply, making further decline quite likely. Instead of holding onto false hope, it's better to exit early. Ultimately, the project's review mechanism needs to be more rigorous to better protect the rights of ordinary investors.