Telegram trading robots are flying high. Why did I choose to integrate with KITE?
A particularly obvious phenomenon in this round of market movement is that various TG trading bots have emerged, such as "one-click all-in" and "instant grab Meme," with interfaces designed to feel as easy as a chat window. However, after trying a few, I found that most so-called "intelligent" systems are basically just helping you press the buy and sell buttons faster; the underlying logic is still your own emotions making the decisions. The gameplay after integrating KITE is quite different; it connects AI strategies with the TG interface. What you see on the front end is still a familiar chat box, but the basis for placing orders has changed to model signals, rather than the "inspiration" of some big influencer. For example: there was a time when Meme coins were wildly popular, and many bot users just followed whoever shouted in the channel, resulting in a lot of people buying at high prices. At that time, I used KITE's "high volatility asset strategy," which first looked at the influx of new funds on-chain, pool depth, and the volume-price coordination of the previous few K lines before deciding whether it was worth chasing. Many times, it chose to "wait for confirmation," which meant missing a few extreme surges, but it also avoided a lot of "straight drops". This kind of "patient" AI actually feels a bit out of sync with mainstream high-frequency trading thinking, but looking back at the position curve, I prefer to run long with this style of robot. During the experience, I also encountered a few small pitfalls, such as KITE's risk control model not identifying some new contracts on certain chains quickly enough; in the first few hours after they came out, they could only be treated as pure Meme, and trying to intervene with strategies had to be a bit slower. Additionally, the TG environment itself has greater security risks than web pages, so authorization and signatures need to be checked several times; you don't want to accidentally grant strange permissions. A little self-deprecating about typos: I used to think that "robots" only helped me "execute commands," but now I realize that good AI is more like helping me "correct commands," otherwise human greed and fear can really ruin positions in just minutes. @KITE AI $KITE


