A trader showed me a strategy that made money 12 months straight.
It still failed the prop firm eval.
Not because he traded badly - because nobody told him "profitable" and "fundable" aren't the same thing.
@PropGuardApp Exactly. You need a strategy built to beat the firm’s rules — not just the market.
That’s exactly what I do. I help prop traders modify their strategy so it stays profitable while staying fully compliant.
@iamdisplacement That’s true.
You can copy a strategy, but you can’t copy the mental strength, psychology, risk management, and discipline built over years of hard work.
@kunoo It’s all about how bad you want it.
Trading demands clarity, discipline, consistency, and mental strength.
Failing is acceptable. Quitting is not.
@TheH0n3stTrader It’s not a complete lie — it’s half true.
For retail traders:
With $100k + → 1% risk is fine.
With small capital → 1% keeps you broke.
For prop firm traders: 1% is usually too slow. It takes forever to pass and get payouts.
@CRTwithSaint People think backtesting is a waste of time but it's not .
People who are starting trading should definately backtest .
The reason behind it is that I will help them psychologically and help them to increase there confidence.
Everyone's trying to crack the prop firm game with a better strategy.
Wrong lever. Funded accounts aren't won by entries — they're won by surviving the rulebook. Daily loss limits, trailing drawdown, consistency rules. That's the actual game.
This is what i do i help traders to crack the prop firm game with a very systematic and mechanical approach.
@Orev_a So true and it really prepares you psychologically on how to take loss and how to manage emotions not only during or after loss but after profit .
You just have to be neutral.
@meeky_fx It depends trader to trader .
I personally take trades on sessions because it gives me proper discipline and also a good amount of liquidity.
@Geedow_ The hidden benefit nobody mentions: fewer pairs = tighter risk math.
10 pairs on a funded account is 10 correlated ways to hit daily loss. 2 pairs means you actually know your max exposure per session. Focus isn't just edge — it's drawdown control.