📢 Gate Square #MBG Posting Challenge# is Live— Post for MBG Rewards!
Want a share of 1,000 MBG? Get involved now—show your insights and real participation to become an MBG promoter!
💰 20 top posts will each win 50 MBG!
How to Participate:
1️⃣ Research the MBG project
Share your in-depth views on MBG’s fundamentals, community governance, development goals, and tokenomics, etc.
2️⃣ Join and share your real experience
Take part in MBG activities (CandyDrop, Launchpool, or spot trading), and post your screenshots, earnings, or step-by-step tutorials. Content can include profits, beginner-friendl
Most trading Bots are bragging about their speed.
While others are still following the trend and chasing after price increases, Outlight users have already filtered out the truly valuable trading signals through data.
It's not about who gets to the finish line faster, but about choosing the right track from the very beginning.
Key points:
1️⃣ Data Dimensions: We track the historical win rates of over 1500+ KOLs, rather than just looking at short-term performance.
2️⃣ Execute closed loop: from signal screening to automatic following orders are fully connected.
3️⃣ Intelligent Recognition: Distinguishing luck from skill through machine learning.
There are two types of traders in the market:
- Passive Followers: Buy whatever they see
- Proactive Decision Maker: Knows why to buy
Outlight helps users transition from the first type to the second type. The real advantage is not in running faster, but in running smarter.
The current question is:
Most tools only address the "how to buy" issue.
Outlight simultaneously solves the questions of "what to buy" and "how to buy".
Data Layer (
If you are still struggling with why you are always a step behind others, you may need to rethink the entire decision-making process. Speed is certainly important, but choosing is more important than effort.
Finally, I would like to share an observation:
90% of trading mistakes in the market are not due to slow execution, but rather due to decision-making errors.
First ensure the direction is correct, then discussing speed makes sense.