Sunwukong DEX's focus recently has clearly been on strengthening the "repeatability of trading actions": enabling users to repeatedly complete real trades using the same set of steps, rather than just making a quick profit at a certain point and then leaving. The long-term value of a trading product often lies not in the peak value of a single event, but in whether users are willing to return afterward. The factors determining return are very practical: whether the execution is close to expectations, whether the process is smooth, whether feedback is timely, and whether failures are recoverable. As long as these are done more consistently, high-frequency trading will naturally become the norm.
For participants, a more stable approach is to treat trading as rhythm management: participate with a sustainable frequency, control volatility risk with more restrained position sizes, and treat each operation as a repetitive action to train execution. The more consistently you can reuse the same path, the easier it is to develop intuition about depth, slippage, and execution results; the stronger the intuition, the lower the decision-making cost, and the less likely you are to be swayed by short-term emotions. Long-term win rates come from stable repetition, not from a single impulsive move.
@JustinSun #TRONEcoStar @sunwukong_DEX


