Sun Wukong DEX is more like a "standardized trading training ground": its key is not how much you earn in one trade, but that you complete each trade according to the process, without being bogged down by uncertainty. Many people fail when using DEX for the first time for the same reason: unclear authorization scope, improper slippage settings, random route selection on the spot, and not knowing how to close the trade after a failure. The problem isn't in the direction, but in the lack of a fixed process.
A more stable training method is to break down the interaction into fixed workstations: small-scale successful execution → confirmation feedback → fixed frequently used paths → only change one variable each time → check and revoke authorization after the trade. With fixed workstations, the error probability significantly decreases, your mindset becomes more stable, and your rhythm is more controllable. Once trading becomes a standard action, you can more easily maintain initiative in continuous activity and market fluctuations.
For yourself, it's recommended to treat the "closing process" as the default: immediately check authorization after the trade, revoke unnecessary permissions, and memorize frequently used paths. Those who stay in the long run are often not the most aggressive, but those who have honed the process into muscle memory.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_DEX