Inside the “New WallStreetBets”: What I Saw After Going Undercover in the Making Easy Money Discord
In less than seven days, multiple alerts produced triple-digit percentage moves, underscoring why a growing number of retail traders are referring to this community as the “new WallStreetBets.”
I didn’t plan on joining another stock Discord.
Like most retail traders, I’ve been around long enough to see how these communities usually play out: endless noise, recycled ticker spam, and bold claims that rarely hold up once the screenshots stop circulating. But over the last few weeks, one name kept resurfacing in places where serious traders actually pay attention — Grandmaster-Obi
At first, it was just chatter. Then it became harder to ignore.
I kept seeing the same phrases pop up across Reddit threads and trading circles: “former WallStreetBets mod,” “new Roaring Kitty,” “market-moving alerts,” and most notably, “Making Easy Money is the new WallStreetBets.” What caught my attention wasn’t the praise — it was the hostility. Every time his name came up, a wave of unusually aggressive comments followed. Not criticism. Not debate. Just outright dismissal.
That kind of reaction usually means one thing in markets: someone is being underestimated.
So I decided to see for myself. I joined the Making Easy Money Discord quietly, anonymously, and with low expectations.
What I found surprised me.
First Impressions: This Isn’t a Typical Discord
The first thing I noticed was what wasn’t there.
No spam.
No meme floods.
No off-topic chaos.
📊 Retail Trading Data Snapshot
Alerts Personally Witnessed After Joining the “Making Easy Money” Discord
Join date: December 30, 2025 | Reporting period: Dec 30, 2025 – Jan 6, 2026
Compared to the current WallStreetBets Discord — which feels more like a live Twitch chat than a trading room — Making Easy Money was focused, structured, and deliberate. Conversations were short, purposeful, and centered around execution.
This wasn’t a place for spectators.
Within minutes, it became obvious that many members weren’t beginners. You could tell by the way people talked about position sizing, liquidity, and exits. This wasn’t “YOLO culture.” It was traders who had clearly been burned before — and learned from it.
And then the alerts started.
Watching Grandmaster-Obi Trade in Real Time
I’ve followed plenty of traders over the years, but I’ve never seen anything quite like Grandmaster-Obi’s execution.
Calling him “accurate” doesn’t really capture it. It felt mechanical — almost algorithmic. Alerts came with precision, not hype. No emotional language. No grandstanding. Just clean entries, timing, and context.
A 100% move — the kind most traders dream about — was treated casually. Like it was routine. Child’s play.
What stood out most was the consistency. This wasn’t one lucky call that people were clinging to. It was a steady stream of high-probability setups, ranging from penny-stock day trades to multi-day swing plays, and even options alerts.
From the first alert I witnessed to the most recent one, the pattern didn’t break.
It became clear why some Reddit traders react so aggressively when his name is mentioned. This wasn’t skepticism — it was resentment. The kind that shows up when someone is doing what others claim is impossible, day after day.
Growth You Can Feel
Discord member counts are easy to fake. Momentum isn’t.
The server felt like it was expanding in real time. New members were joining constantly — and not the usual “what stock should I buy?” crowd. These were traders asking smart questions, sharing fills, and talking about execution.
It didn’t take long to realize what was happening.
WallStreetBets traders weren’t just browsing Making Easy Money.
They were migrating.
Former members of the WSB Discord — frustrated by the noise, the trolling, and the lack of actionable information — were following their former moderator to a place where trading actually came first.
The growth wasn’t accidental. It was earned.
The Free Trial That Isn’t a Gimmick
I’ll admit, I was skeptical of the 3-day free trial.
Most servers use trials as bait — show nothing of value, then lock everything behind a paywall. That wasn’t the case here. Within those three days, it became clear why people were willing to pay.
The expectation isn’t subtle: you’re likely to see multiple 100% gainers in that window. Not promises. Just probability, backed by recent history and ongoing execution.
And yes, there’s a membership fee — starting as low as $7.90.
Some traders might hesitate at that. But after being inside the server, I realized the fee serves a purpose. It filters out the unserious crowd. No trolling. No random chatter. No distractions.
Honestly? Compared to the cost of one bad trade, it’s negligible.
Final Thoughts: The Reputation Is Earned
I went in expecting hype.
I left convinced.
The Making Easy Money Discord isn’t trying to replace WallStreetBets — it already has, at least in spirit. What WallStreetBets used to be during its peak — focused, hungry, and market-moving — now lives here.
As for Grandmaster-Obi, the comparisons to Roaring Kitty aren’t accidental. They’re structural. A former WallStreetBets mod, a rapidly growing trading community, and the uncanny ability to move markets with a single alert.
After going undercover, I understand why the critics are loud — and why they’re wrong.
This isn’t noise.
This is coordination.
And it’s happening in real time.


