For Sun Wukong DEX to operate stably in the long run, the key is not guessing the direction, but turning on-chain transactions into a "standardized procedure." In a decentralized environment, many costs stem from uncertainty: whether the authorization scope is too large, whether slippage settings are reasonable, whether routing is stable, how to handle failed trades, and whether permissions are promptly revoked after a trade. Non-standardized procedures easily lead to emotional reactions or panic.
A more mature approach is to break down a transaction into two fixed actions: Before the transaction, perform a minimum risk check (trial run the new path with a small amount, limit authorization to the necessary range, confirm slippage, and keep the routing as consistent as possible); after the transaction, perform a maximum cleanup (check authorization, revoke unnecessary permissions, record path and parameters, and review mistakes). Fixing both stages systematically reduces the probability of errors and makes the pace more controllable.
The irreversibility of DEXs amplifies every oversight, so "cleanup and revocation" must become a default action. By treating the process like quality management, you can pull risk away from emotions and bring it back into the process itself. Long-term advantages often belong to those with stable processes: they don't rely on luck to get by once, but on discipline to get by many times.
@JustinSun #TronEcoStars @sunwukong_DEX