How to become crypto millionaire

To become a crypto millionaire, you have to understand the importance of Bitcoin and Ethereum. Don't get caught up on just those two, you need to start finding the next one after the big two cryptos (Bitcoin and Ethereum). Start focusing on what the number three is. You also need to focus on altcoins

You need to have multiple accounts. This is also related to how to buy altcoins and where to buy them. The first thing that you should understand is that not all the popular altcoins are available on the exchange applications like Coinbase, Gemini, Binance, BlockFi, Remitano, etc; you need to have another account at another exchange that you’ve probably never heard about.

To find out where to buy certain altcoins, you need to go to these two sites- Gecko and Coin market cap. You’re gonna find out a bunch of info on coins, but if you scroll down, you’ll find the info of where you can buy them.

The main reason why you should have multiple exchanges is that if you only have the main ones like Coinbase and Gemini, you’re not going to be able to get your hands on some of the cryptos that are already getting popular. By the time it hits those exchanges. it’s already going to be at a high price.

Who wants to be a millionaire?

For two decades, beginning in 1999, that was the name of one of the most popular TV game shows ever syndicated in the U.S. The show, an adaptation of one with British roots, saw a single contestant compete for the chance to win $1 million by answering a series of progressively harder multiple-choice questions read to them by a celebrity host.

The competition for getting a shot at that prize each time the show aired was reportedly intense – an initial cap of 100,000 to 200,000 hopefuls were whittled down to 300, who were further vetted until one person got a chance to take the hot seat. The odds were maybe a smidge better than the one in 14 million chance of winning the lottery, but still largely a crapshoot. Contestants knew that, but wanted the thrill and bragging rights of participating – and, of course, a shot at the million bucks.

Over the show’s 20-year run, most contestants didn’t go home empty-handed, but only 12 contestants, according to some reports, laid claim to the million-dollar prize.

Today's version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" includes Gen Zers and millennials playing a very different game – one that anyone can play.

People can play this game on their smartphones using a variety of apps, including common digital wallets and investment apps. The game sort of includes the famous "ask the audience" (rather than ask a friend) option that was one of the hallmarks of the namesake’s gameshow format.

According to a September 2021 study by Engine Insights, 59% of Gen Zs believe the way to become a millionaire is to invest in crypto. Almost half of millennials (46%) agree. Apps have turned their smartphones into the modern-day digital equivalent of slot machines, making it largely effortless to place bets on hundreds of crypto coins without knowing much about their intrinsic value beyond what others, including high-profile social influencers, say about them.

And that’s exactly who they turn to for advice. A Motley Fool study in July of 2021 reported that 91% of Gen Z investors believe that social media is more trustworthy than friends, family and traditional investing sites when making their investment decisions. YouTube, Reddit and TikTok were the three most popular social media sites they used to decide whether, when and how much to invest.

All in the hopes of hitting the jackpot, winning big, feeling the thrill, having the bragging rights. The odds are just as stacked against them as they are in any other game of chance – but with potentially dire consequences as they put real money into alt coins, many of which have no real fundamentals that drive their present and future value ... aside from what other people just like them are doing.

When the Crowd Has No Wisdom

The story of the SQUID coin might be familiar. Its value – reportedly linked to the hit streaming show on Netflix, "Squid Games" – soared 2400% in value, only to plummet to zero in the space of a few hours.

Like Tulipmania in the 17th century, investors rushed to get in as its value soared for no obvious reason, and social media fanned the flames. One investor in Shanghai, who described himself as an experienced crypto investor, told CNBC that he invested his $28,000 life’s savings in the coin, only to lose it all. The only ones who apparently made any money on the coin were the anonymous SQUID coin developers, who are reportedly $3.4 million richer. The investors who lost it all have no recourse to recover their money.

So why would an experienced crypto investor – and many like him – put their entire life savings into SQUID, even as media outlets raised red flags?

Pure speculation. It seemed like a sure way to make a quick buck. It didn’t hurt that 89,000 other people were doing the same thing. A clear lack of wisdom in that crowd.

Over the course of three days in January of 2021, the value of a coin that started as a joke, Dogecoin, increased 216% in value as a result of an Elon Musk tweet.

That, among other things, drove a rush of new Robinhood accounts to buy it. According to Robinhood earnings reports, Doge accounted for more than 62% of Robinhood’s crypto-related transaction revenues in Q2, 34% in Q1 and 40% in Q3.

Dogecoin today – remarkably, perhaps – has a $30 billion market cap and is trading at $.22 a coin, down from a high of $.74 in May but up from $.002961 at its 52-week low. The year-to-date increase in Doge is an astounding 4,714.59%.

As I was checking its price on CoinDesk, there was a flashing advertisement promoting a $10 bonus for anyone opening an account at their exchange and buying some crypto.

Maybe I should, so that I can get in on the next big dog altcoin action.

Sadly for Doge, a new dog coin has emerged to muscle its way into top-dog position in the alt coin world, pardon the pun. Shib, short for Shibu Inu coin, is trading today at $.00004893 a coin, so it doesn’t take much of an investment to buy a ginormous amount of it. A hundred bucks would buy a couple of million.

And why wouldn’t everyone want to do that?

A recent analysis of the coin reports that anyone who invested $15 in August of 2020, when it was trading at $0.00000000051 a coin, would be a millionaire by now. But buyer beware. As one astute crypto analyst pointed out, it’s also quite possible that Shib’s meteoric rise in value could be followed by an equally sharp decline.

Want to know why there are more than 5,000 alt coins worldwide? Starting a coin is like building a casino, without the hassle of getting government permission and paying for the cement.

Investing in them is like gambling, playing the slots, buying a lottery ticket, hoping to hit the jackpot. Without any real understanding of what these coins do, why they are valuable or what’s the use case for any of them. Where the only fundamentals for making the investment are what other mostly amateur investors say on social media, and whether the price is up or down at the open or close.

It’s not like the real "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire," because you don’t actually have to know anything, and most people don’t pretend they do.
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