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If you want the real, no-BS answer—it’s not either/or forever, it’s a cycle. But right now, it usually starts with Bitcoin dominance before any real altcoin season kicks off. Here’s how it typically plays out: Phase 1: Bitcoin runs firstMoney flows into Bitcoin because it’s seen as the “safer” cryptRead more
If you want the real, no-BS answer—it’s not either/or forever, it’s a cycle. But right now, it usually starts with Bitcoin dominance before any real altcoin season kicks off.
Here’s how it typically plays out:
Phase 1: Bitcoin runs first
Money flows into Bitcoin because it’s seen as the “safer” crypto. Big players, institutions, and cautious investors start there. Bitcoin dominance (BTC.D) goes up.
Phase 2: Ethereum follows
Once Bitcoin cools off a bit, money rotates into Ethereum. People start taking more risk.
Phase 3: Altcoin season
After BTC and ETH have already moved, profits start flowing into smaller altcoins. That’s when you see those crazy 5x–20x moves. This is what people call “alt season.”
Where we usually are (in most cycles):
If Bitcoin is still leading and making strong moves, alt season hasn’t fully started yet. Altcoins might pump here and there, but a true alt season is when:
- Most alts outperform Bitcoin
- Retail hype explodes
- Even random coins start pumping
Quick reality check:
- Bitcoin dominance rising → risk-off mindset
- Bitcoin dominance falling → risk-on (alts get attention)
My straight take:
If you’re early in a cycle → Bitcoin dominance wins
If you’re mid-to-late cycle → altcoin season shows up
But chasing alt season too early is where most people get wrecked.
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Some influencers actually get paid directly to promote a coin or token. It might be cash, free coins, or even equity in a project. The problem? A lot of them don’t clearly say it’s sponsored. So it looks like they’re giving “honest advice,” but really they’re hyping something because it pays. Even iRead more
Some influencers actually get paid directly to promote a coin or token. It might be cash, free coins, or even equity in a project. The problem? A lot of them don’t clearly say it’s sponsored. So it looks like they’re giving “honest advice,” but really they’re hyping something because it pays.
Even if it’s not outright fraud, it messes with beginners big time. People see their favorite YouTuber or TikToker saying “this is gonna 10x” and think it’s unbiased, when really it’s marketing.
And yeah, there are straight-up scams where influencers pump a coin, people buy in, and then the price crashes — classic pump-and-dump.
That’s why the smart move is:
If you can spot when someone is being paid vs actually analyzing a project, you’ll dodge like 90% of beginner traps.
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