The Sun Wukong DEX operates more like a "discipline-testing pressure cooker": the more volatile the market, the more your position boundaries, stop-loss discipline, and profit-taking strategies get put to the test. For most traders, the issue isn't in their judgment, but in execution drift: entering trades haphazardly, impulsively adding to positions, being lucky with stop-losses, and failing to take profits. In a calm market, the drift isn't noticeable, but in a volatile market, it can quickly escalate into a series of mistakes, turning manageable risks into unmanageable ones.
A more sustainable approach is to treat trading like an engineering process: lock in your position limits first, write down your stop-loss levels and exit conditions in advance, take profits in planned increments, and handle drawdowns strictly according to your plan; after each trade, review the slippage range, reasons for failed executions, and emotional triggers, documenting your error patterns to correct your actions with data next time. Permission management should also be standardized: small amounts, short authorizations, and clear out after use.
@Justin Sun_孙宇晨 #TRONEcoStar @sunwukong_dex
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