Sim are very valuable if used right. The $$'s should never be the aim. It should always be on process.... position sizing ...taking stops....learning to hit the odd ripper.... Learning how to read the market....learning a plan that works and most importantly learning how the plan actually acts. So as soon as you hit a bad patch you know what is going on and don't lose your head and control. As you already have seen a rough patch in sim mode you know that if you continue with correct process you will get back on track.
Doing what druss has done is so damaging that I would think he has no hope. When he starts with real money he has in the back of his head that he went from $100,000 to $200,000 of pretend money by throwing all position sizing and risk management out the door. He has not only wasted his first 6 months training but most certainly set a thought process up that will undermine his trading for a long time.
Practise is very very important. Have a look at the Olympics. Most athletes spend 40- 60 hours practising a week for 10 years or more to get to that level of performance. I believe trading is no different.
Perfect practise makes perfect performance.
Druss denial makes great fodder for the zero sum game. When you coming over to the SPI with real money
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