different times, different market, different tokens and different investors's confidence in them as a result.
Certainly, this rule cannot apply to every project; they supposedly serve a different purpose, have different developers, etc. I'm just a little disappointed in the latest launchpool projects. I was used to making a decent amount of money through them, but at some point, their frequency was so high that before one project was over, another was announced.
Binance is a very good exchange if a token is listed here it has a good value, but not all coins have a good profit. so it is better to research your project and not hold all the tokens and keep the potential coins and sell the rest. Although these are free rewards so there is no chance of loss. so if you want to hold all of them then if one of them pumps a lot then you get a lot of profit. For example, when SOL was listed, I got 140 free SOLs and sold them for under $1 per SOL, which now has huge value. If I had held it then instead of selling it, I would have got a much bigger amount now.
You can never know, and personally, I don't have enough available time to research every single project that's listed on Binance Launchpool, and even if I do, it doesn't mean that it'll actually change anything; there is never a guarantee on how these coins develop. I sold ENA at approximately $0.90 to $1 more or less; I can't remember exactly, and a few hours later it surpassed $1.25, and upon checking, it had even reached as high as $1.49.