@ahmedxm01 There was a clear order block and FVG, and the market had already tapped the order block before you entered the trade, which is why you applied proper risk management.
I also join the moving train with proper risk management!!!
Thanks for the great knowledge Boss #Ahmed_Xm
Damn 😭🔥
Got a fb from the lion himself @KookCapitalLLC
The man who cooks, serves, and still eats his own alpha 😂
Dragged a whole project once and had the entire team shaking 💀
Much respect to the Alpha King 🙌
Big love bruh
Your consistency is unmatched.
I appreciate you akhi
“Save me from Yap jail”
My opinion.
This phrase has been stirring up a lot of emotions lately. I get it, many influencers see it and instantly assume the person isn’t serious, wants quick results, or isn’t willing to put in real effort. And because of that, they often get ignored or written off.
Some even set standards like, “I’ll watch how consistent you are for a month or two before helping.” That’s fair, effort should be recognized. While others simply don’t bother at all. Their status has grown so much that helping new people only happens if there’s a personal connection or mutual friend.
I think maybe some influencers don’t fully understand that statement, or maybe they overlook the reality around it.
This wouldn’t even be a big issue if infofi hadn’t become such a major part of Web3 right now. Let’s be honest, this is the main way people are earning lately, not through onchain tasks or testnets. But it comes with pressure, you have to make visible progress fast.
In the previous cycle, most of us were just here to get info, drop a few likes, and get back to work. No one cared about impressions or visibility. But now, since engagement literally means income, everyone is forced to be active.
Because of that, influencer’s engagement rates have skyrocketed, more people interact just to stay eligible for rewards. It’s great, and every influencer who built their platform deserves that recognition. You worked hard for it. But still, small accounts played a huge part in getting you there.
We all know how infofi platforms are structured, they favor influencers naturally. You just post, and smaller accounts engage. Around 97% of those engagements come from small accounts, the rest are your close friends or regulars.
So when leaderboards come out, you’ll rarely see many small accounts in the top 250, maybe 20 at best, and even those probably worked tirelessly behind the scenes through WhatsApp or Telegram. That’s why most smaller users have stopped competing. They’ve tried, failed, and lost hope.
The only time they really shine is when a project has no threshold and rewards a larger group. That’s when you’ll see them trying again, putting in effort, seeking small boosts, and hoping for visibility.
Now, about those saying “save me from yap jail” — they’re usually not lazy people. They’re the ones still trying to prove they’re serious. They turn on your post notifications, engage daily, reply under your content, and even subscribe to you, just to stand out.
No one forced them to do that. They chose to support you genuinely. So labeling them as unserious feels unfair.
Out of 100k followers, if 500 chose to subscribe and actively engage, that’s not a sign of laziness, it’s commitment.
Yes, everyone wants to grow, but this cycle is short, just two months left. Most infofi campaigns will end soon. Influencers are already established, but smaller users are still trying to make something out of this cycle. Many haven’t earned enough to sustain through a bearish phase or invest back in.
So when someone who supports you daily asks for a small boost, maybe a comment or two — it’s not entitlement. It’s just a plea for a fair chance.
Because if showing up every day, replying, and subscribing still doesn’t prove effort, what will?
All they want is that little help to earn 1–20 yaps — the difference between eligibility and being left out.
If that small gesture feels like too much to ask, then how different is that from the “bad devs” people complain about?
It’s funny because we always hear “small accounts matter” or “I support my community.” But if none of your subscribers make it to leaderboards, are you really helping them this cycle?
This isn’t to attack or accuse anyone. It’s simply sharing how small accounts feel — hoping it brings a little understanding.
No one forced me to subscribe or engage. I choose to. But please, don’t call me unserious or entitled for asking for a little support before this cycle ends.
Thanks.
Giveaway!!!
100 $hbar to 5 winners
20 $hbar each
How to enter??
1️⃣ Follow @Younglezy22 and @offlipking
2️⃣ Like and RT
3️⃣ Tag at least 3 $hbar friends
Winners will be announced in 24hrs
Best of luck 🔥