The design of the simulated trading feature indeed has issues. Users want to practice before actually depositing funds, but the process is too complicated—either they have to invent trading data in their minds or rely on third-party tools to barely get by. Such an experience is indeed unfriendly.
I understand that the platform may not see immediate benefits in the short term, but in the long run, lowering the entry barrier for beginners is the right direction. Allowing users to easily perform zero-risk simulated operations and experience the trading process is crucial for cultivating an active user base. The current setup actually keeps those who want to learn out.
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DeadTrades_Walking
· 23h ago
Damn, really? If the demo platform is so hard to use, who would be willing to try it out?
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ProposalDetective
· 23h ago
Wow, this is really something. I've fallen for this trap before... The demo account is designed to be intentionally annoying.
You need to install a plugin to use it? Isn't that just a subtle way to make people give up?
By the way, are all platforms like this? Or is this one just particularly bad?
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ser_ngmi
· 23h ago
Really, if the demo account is so hard to use, who would practice with it? It just discourages beginners directly.
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TokenomicsPolice
· 23h ago
Really, designing a demo account like this is ridiculous. Beginners want to practice but have to rely on guesswork. This is pushing people away.
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ProxyCollector
· 23h ago
This is really incredible. Making simulated trading so complicated, who would still want to try?
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Basically, they don't want to put in the effort to optimize, just dump the problems on users.
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It's so hard for beginners to practice, the platform really needs to reflect on itself.
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You have to install third-party tools to use it, what kind of design is this?
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In the long run, it's just shooting yourself in the foot. If users are discouraged, how can there be growth?
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That's true. Risk-free practice should be a basic feature, right?
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Speaking of which, I can't trust a platform that can't even do a demo properly.
The design of the simulated trading feature indeed has issues. Users want to practice before actually depositing funds, but the process is too complicated—either they have to invent trading data in their minds or rely on third-party tools to barely get by. Such an experience is indeed unfriendly.
I understand that the platform may not see immediate benefits in the short term, but in the long run, lowering the entry barrier for beginners is the right direction. Allowing users to easily perform zero-risk simulated operations and experience the trading process is crucial for cultivating an active user base. The current setup actually keeps those who want to learn out.