
Bitget, your emperors have always been here!
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Bitget, your emperors have always been here!
When it all began with Bitget, Web3 finally gained a warm heartbeat.
Author: @mokanaibing

My connection with Bitget dates back to the first half of 2024.
At that time, the startup I co-founded with a friend failed and shut down, leaving me unemployed and adrift at home.
Every day, I idly chatted in my Web2 community group—until one day, a group member casually shared a link to the BG Wallet. That very day, I walked through the door into Web3.
Prior to that, I’d always viewed cryptocurrency as an elite, niche circle—distant and inaccessible.
It wasn’t until I encountered Bitget that I truly felt:
When someone safeguards your small savings,
When someone adds color to your daily life,
When someone consistently surprises you,
and when it all begins with Bitget—Web3 finally beats with a warm, human heartbeat.
“The BG Emperor”
This nickname was bestowed upon me by fellow community members—and stuck for over three months.
To this day, some friends still tag me with it—a gleaming badge of honor.
In our group, there’s also a “BG Crown Prince,” two “BG Princesses,” and a whole squad of “BG Knights.”
The titles originated from BG Wallet’s #FairLaunchpool campaign, which required participants to trade MEME tokens; winners were randomly selected to share airdrop rewards.
Titles were assigned based on how many times someone won across successive campaign rounds.
I happened to land on the winner list every single round.
Mainly thanks to the exceptionally high win rate.
Back then, winning lists were published on X (formerly Twitter), and results appeared on the app even earlier than on X.
So, for the first time ever, I begged and pleaded to download X—naively hunted for a VPN, followed step-by-step tutorials to register an account, and subscribed to @BitgetWalletCN and @Bitget_zh. To this day, those two accounts remain at the very bottom of my X following list.
All that effort was solely to post the winner spreadsheet in our group as soon as possible—not to show off, but purely to help group members who didn’t have X accounts.
At the time, among countless wallets, only Bitget’s campaigns made me feel genuine sincerity—and let me earn real money.
I regret not inviting family and friends to join in. Not because I selfishly hoarded opportunities—but simply due to poor execution.
I still keep those old winner lists archived in my Google Sheets—a cherished memory.
Over the years, I’ve upgraded my phone several times—but the first thing I do with every new device is install both the BG Wallet and Bitget apps.

“My First Diss”
Truth be told, this is one of my blackest moments—a chapter clouded by misunderstanding.
In April 2025, I posted a lengthy thread on X criticizing Bitget Exchange’s handling of a major crisis—thousands of words detailing my disappointment with its response and leadership’s inaction, specifically naming Xie Jiayin, Bitget’s Chinese-speaking Head.
Frankly, I wrote it out of love for BG.
My words may have been sharp—but they were meant as constructive feedback and actionable suggestions, intended to prompt platform improvements.
Yet many opportunistic users amplified and distorted my original intent, turning my critique into mere venting. Comments beneath the post were riddled with falsehoods.
Indeed: “Rumors spread on a whim; debunking them takes endless legwork.”
That period saw any anti-BG post—even from anonymous accounts—go massively viral.
I promptly deleted the post and messaged Jiayin directly on X ( @xiejiayinBitget) to apologize sincerely—and to wish BG well through the storm.
Any company bold enough to build the industry deserves criticism, complaints about shortcomings, or even harsh language—but baseless smear campaigns are truly shameful.
True companionship isn’t blind praise. It’s standing by a platform—even after misjudging it—once truth emerges, and choosing to build alongside it.

“Bitget Onchain Function Tester”
In April 2025, BG was promoting its exchange’s onchain trading functionality.
Having earned rewards for completing my first onchain trade, I spent those days actively using the feature—both for trading and opportunity scouting.
I tested it across multiple devices: Android phones, iPhones, iPads, and MacBooks.
I compiled eight detailed usability feedback points, proposed nine new features, and executed fifty trades—all meticulously handwritten on a full sheet of paper.

I didn’t do it just for the campaign—I joined because many group members had already claimed rewards and encouraged me to conduct a deep, thorough review.
I’m not driven purely by outcomes. Even though campaign prizes were generous—and I certainly aimed for top rewards—the real value I gained far surpassed cash payouts.
I approach every activity with care and intention, treating each participation as a long-term personal investment.
After finishing all tests, I felt immense accomplishment—even though some commenters criticized me…
Criticism is welcome for flaws—but outstanding features deserve enthusiastic praise.
Jiayin even DM’d me, commending my write-up and inviting me into the official onchain tester group to share insights with others.
One line he wrote still gives me goosebumps every time I re-read it—transporting me right back to that moment.
It radiated pure sincerity and warmth.
“I genuinely loved your post—but I hesitated to comment publicly, afraid it might draw backlash toward you.”
Later, we connected on WeChat.
He even offered to help me apply for an internal platform reward—though he absolutely didn’t need to.

“The Bitget U Card: My Dating Fund”
I’ve recommended Bitget’s U Card everywhere—including to my girlfriend, who now holds one too.
Mine serves as my daily payment tool, especially where WeChat Pay or Alipay aren’t accepted.
Hers? I’ve dedicated it exclusively to our “dating fund”—what I call our “Web3 Couple’s Mini-Purse.”
This ritual has become something special between us.
We use it for flowers on her birthday, Valentine’s Day, International Women’s Day, May 20th (“I Love You Day”), Lunar New Year…
I honestly don’t get why there are so many flower-giving holidays!!
Though I think short-lived fresh flowers serve little practical purpose, my girlfriend absolutely adores them.
At least I no longer rack my brain trying to decide what gift to give.
The arrival of Bitget’s U Card fundamentally reshaped how I handle everyday payments—both in and out of crypto.
Funding friction dropped sharply. Daily spending flows became seamless. Tasks that once required multiple steps now happen naturally.
Shout-out to Kaji ( @kajiweb3): How about launching a “Flower Card”? Every seven floral purchases via the U Card unlocks exclusive Bitget merch!

“My First Major Airdrop Harvest”
In early 2025, airdrop farming surged in popularity. I built a dedicated mining rig and joined the ranks.
I participated in numerous projects—but most offered minimal interaction, resulting in either Sybil detection or tiny allocations.
Only one project delivered what I considered a meaningful yield: Soon.
And yes—this tied closely to Bitget’s airdrop distribution.
I ran 400 accounts—all received Soon airdrops, but most got just 0.2 tokens.
Soon’s official claim portal supported Bitget UID login, so I used Bitget UIDs for all accounts—and created all sub-accounts within just two hours.
On distribution day, I consolidated everything—and was thrilled by the result.
A total of $50,000 USD worth.
Of that, Bitget’s airdrop bonus alone contributed 8,000 tokens—even the 0.2-allocations received an extra 20 tokens.
This unwavering commitment—to never overlook even the smallest retail participant, rewarding even minuscule shares generously—is precisely how Bitget embodies inclusivity as a full-stack UEX platform.

This may not rank high among seasoned airdrop farmers—but for me, it was life-changing.
Remember: My salary at the time was just ¥2,850 per month.
This windfall became my fuel to keep pushing forward in Web3.
I immediately shared my joy with Jiayin on WeChat.
He celebrated with me—and shouted “Awesome!”
I could tell—it was heartfelt. Between men, only “Holy shit!” and “Awesome!” can fully express genuine admiration.
“Even Dog Hunters Get Their Spring”
By June–July, I officially dove into “dog hunting”—the art of spotting emerging tokens.
I tried every hot dog-hunting platform and exchange-based onchain tools available.
My most-used tools? Bitget’s Onchain Trading and the BG Wallet’s Golden Dog Radar.
The Golden Dog Radar functions as a powerful intelligence tool—helping me identify narratives and assess trade viability.
Meanwhile, onchain trading filled critical gaps in my strategy.
Granted—I haven’t yet caught a 100x “golden dog,” and I’ve definitely sold too early on several fast-rising tokens.
But I’ve stuck to my “double-and-exit” rule—and picked up plenty of micro-skills from the community.
Examples include: how to rebalance positions intelligently, reading *How韭菜Lose Money and Change Their Lives* when profits roll in, switching my phone to “Teen Mode” before chasing pumps, and arbitrage tactics…
Last October, during the MEME token boom, these “cooling-down” tricks helped me trade steadily—and netted me tens of thousands of dollars.
Bitget remains the only platform where I’ve never lost money.
These techniques—still part of my daily toolkit today—function like life hacks, lifting me out of the gloom of passive dog hunting and shielding me from premature sells and mindless pump-chasing.
Positive reinforcement matters deeply while dog hunting.
Because sustained losses breed negativity—and quickly drain motivation to continue.
On Bitget, I evolved from “ignore narrative, buy anything trending” to “double-and-exit, exit high-volume rallies.”
Maybe I’ll never strike it rich.
But in this market, while overnight wealth stories abound, simply staying alive—surviving cycle after cycle—is itself a rare, invaluable treasure.
“Bitget, Your Emperors Are Still Here!”
Today, Bitget is far more than just a place to buy crypto. Its full-ecosystem experience resonates deeply with me.
Before, I constantly bounced between platforms. Now, one card bridges Web3 and real-world spending.
One exchange app lets me explore the crypto frontier—and access cutting-edge, tech-forward applications.
You hear our feedback.
You feel our voices.
You uphold the quality of our experiences.
Bear markets and bull markets aren’t defined merely by profit or loss—but by whether we retain the courage to move forward amid downturns.
Perhaps the next cycle will bring stronger fundamentals to sustain the industry—and with opportunity comes greater wealth.
Sure, getting rich overnight is unlikely.
But… what if?
You’ll undoubtedly see criticism and vitriol directed at Bitget—but you’ll also see tangible changes and continuous optimization.
I live by one principle: “Don’t judge people by what they say—judge them by what they do.”
That holds true for platforms, too.
I hope to keep exploring the crypto world—never losing courage.
In this article, I’ve written about more than just Bitget Exchange—covering wallet campaigns, the U Card, etc. But none of it strays off-topic.
It’s precisely these user-centric offerings that make Bitget stick—not just for me, but for countless others willing to engage deeply with its ecosystem.
Relying solely on one acquisition tactic risks losing users after one bad experience—or worse, poisoning their view of the entire crypto space.
Like during the MEME boom: some profited and declared “Bull Market is here!”—while others fell for scams and turned bitterly against the whole platform, the whole industry.
Getting the small things right—with integrity and attention to detail—builds trust. And trust inspires protection.
I hope more platforms invest in such products.
I believe true Web3 maturity won’t be measured by how many sharp “swords” emerge—but by how many usable “shields” are built for ordinary people.
Swords serve the strong. Shields serve everyone.
I believe this industry will reach far beyond niche circles—and enter the daily lives of everyday people.
I look forward to seeing more such innovation.
To truly call a place home means more than keeping it spotless—it means wanting to return there, even if it’s imperfect, even if it falls short of expectations.
Sometimes, perfection isn’t the goal—repairing, improving, and staying is.
I’m still here!
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