Sun Wukong DEX is more like a "cockpit" than a page filled with buttons. What truly determines your stability isn't how well you predict market trends, but whether you've become accustomed to reviewing key indicators: Is the authorized range too large? Is the slippage setting reasonable? Is the routing stable? Are there contingency plans for failures? Have permissions been revoked after a trade? Every indicator in the cockpit represents a risk point; ignoring one can have irreversible, amplified cost on the blockchain.
A more stable approach is to write your operations as a "signal process": Before takeoff, only perform small test runs to confirm feedback; only increase your position size when the green light appears; only change one variable at a time to avoid multiple variables causing a loss of focus in post-trade analysis; immediately after landing, perform a cleanup—check authorizations, revoke unnecessary permissions, and record the routing and parameters. Once you've mastered this process, trading transforms from an emotional act into a mechanical one, naturally controlling the pace.
Those who can survive long-term in DEXs are often not the most aggressive, but rather those most like pilots: preferring to perform extra checks rather than skip cleanups. Once you internalize cockpit logic, you'll find that even the biggest fluctuations are less likely to disrupt your execution, making it easier to participate consistently in consecutive rounds.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_DEX