And I would like to refer to this part
"I always following my gut".Two of you have disagreed on that with me, writing that:
Following your gut is not really a reliable method when it comes to investing. You want to base your decisions on solid research, not just some random gut feelings that changes overtime.
or
But our guts can also be wrong. I know that feeling that sometimes we tend to feel something good or bad within a project but that won't be enough IMHO to have a verdict whether you should invest or not.
What I wanted to say, was that, in my opinion, at the end of the process, whether it is good to invest in something or not, it should be your own decision. So for me, following my gut means that I will do research and read different opinions, but at the end, my own opinion is what matters.
And if a project has great statistics and appears to be a gem, but I have a feeling inside that something isn't right (even if I can't say what it is), I won't invest in it.
Nice, that's a great explanation about following your gut. That means that it's not just solely basing on what you feel towards a project but you're backing it up with research and more readings.
It's a good way to assess a project that you're doing all of those stuff unlike many today, they invest in because they're emotional and doesn't back up with any solid reference to defend why they've invested into a project.
Much even worse if they just follow the herd of that token's investors.