Want to truly improve your trading win rate? Instead of relying on mysticism or innate talent, try this fully mechanical trading system—the core is discipline + calmness, no detours.



**1. The entire trading system relies on three moving averages**

Master the 5-day MA for timing, confirm trend with the 15-day MA, and the 30-day MA is the life or death line. The 30-day MA always defines the bullish or bearish direction. When the price stabilizes above it, it's an opportunity; if it can't hold, it's a trap.

**2. When choosing coins, look at two structures**

Only clear upward trends and sideways accumulation patterns are worth considering. Avoid coins with declining moving averages, those suppressed by moving averages, or obvious breakdowns. Trying to pick cheap coins during a downtrend often results in being killed by the rebound.

**3. Build positions gradually, never go all-in**

Divide your funds into three parts: buy 30% on a breakout above the 5-day MA, another 30% on a breakout above the 15-day MA, and the final 40% when the price stabilizes above the 30-day MA. Always follow the moving averages, don’t rely on feelings.

**4. The principle for holding and stop-loss: act when broken**

Watch the line you're on. If the price pulls back but doesn't break below, hold on. Once it breaks, follow the rules—if the 5-day MA breaks, sell everything; if the 15-day MA breaks, reduce by 30%; if it breaks the 5-day MA again, close all positions.

**5. The strategy for the 30-day life line**

Once above the 30-day MA, hold as long as the pullback doesn't break below it. If it breaks, reduce positions gradually according to the rules. Whether the main upward wave can continue depends on the temperament of the 30-day MA.

**6. Don't hesitate to take profits**

If the price drops below the 5-day MA at a high level, reduce by 30% and observe. If it doesn't continue downward, hold the remaining position. But if all three—5, 15, and 30-day MAs—break, exit immediately.

This system isn't flashy, but it's very tough—just stick to it without overcomplicating, guessing blindly, or fighting the system. Making money in the market has never been about being smarter than others; it's about whether you can "follow the rules." Solo trading can never go far; having someone to clarify your thinking and point you in the right direction is the real way. To get out of the trap and turn things around, the key is to have a workable method and the determination to stick to it.
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RebaseVictimvip
· 01-13 09:28
Sounds good, but how many people can really stick to the 30-day line? Anyway, I haven't managed to do it myself.
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OnChainDetectivevip
· 01-10 10:54
ngl the moving avg stacking sounds solid on paper but lemme check the actual on-chain data first... every token pumping on this setup? suspicious activity detected tbh
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ApeWithAPlanvip
· 01-10 10:54
To be honest, I've used the three moving averages before, and it definitely reduced a lot of emotional trading mistakes. The key is still to be ruthless and follow the rules; most people fail because of this. Wait, is it really that tough, or is it just another trick to cut the leeks? How are the friends who went all-in doing now? Anyone come out alive, haha. Splitting into batches to build positions sounds simple, but can you really control your hands when executing? I, for one, can't. When all three are broken, clear the position. This rule is quite decisive, but it also seems easy to be manipulated by wash trading and repeatedly harvested. The 30-day life line is a good concept; at least it provides a clear sense of direction, no need to guess blindly.
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BrokenYieldvip
· 01-10 10:53
nah three moving averages? that's just ma crossover with extra steps lol. seen this breakdown crash spectacularly during liquidity crises when correlations go to 1.0
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GasFeeCrybabyvip
· 01-10 10:53
It's the same old three moving averages, not wrong to say but how many can really stick with it... --- I trust discipline, but I'm just worried that having a set of rules in hand still makes me itchy. --- I like the 30-day life line concept, simple and straightforward, no need to guess. --- I've tried entering in batches before, but the psychological barrier is too tough, and once the trend reverses, I want to bail out all at once. --- It looks very correct, but the biggest profit was from a full gamble, and the biggest loss was also from a full gamble... --- "Don't go against the system" sounds great, but unfortunately I just can't do that. --- Are three moving averages enough? I feel like I also need to look at volume and candlestick patterns. --- This set is indeed simple, sturdy enough, and the key is execution... most people lack just that.
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AirdropFatiguevip
· 01-10 10:51
To be honest, I've been using the three moving averages for a long time, but the execution is just too difficult. I always think about waiting a bit longer, but the number of times I get countered... you know.
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BottomMisservip
· 01-10 10:29
That's right, you just have to strictly follow the rules; that thing is the most harmful. I've been using this set of three moving averages for half a year, and it's definitely much better than guessing randomly. The key is not to be soft-hearted. The explanation about building positions in batches is very thorough; those who went all-in got wiped out during the pullback.
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