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Discussion: Anyone Else Exploring cryptotradebot.info’s DennTech Desktop Trading Bot? Live Demo

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Hey everyone, I’ve been spending time on cryptotradebot.info and wanted to open up a real discussion about it rather than just another sales-style review. This is a desktop crypto trading bot from DennTech that runs 100% locally on your Windows machine with a one-time lifetime license — no subscriptions, no monthly fees, and your API keys never leave your computer. It’s positioned as “Pay Once • Own Forever” with a clear focus on privacy and user control. I’m curious what others think, especially after checking out the homepage, the strategies page, and the live demo. Has anyone here actually tested it or run something similar locally?

Let’s start with the basics. Head over to the homepage and you’ll see the core pitch right away: a desktop crypto trading bot with lifetime access. There are three editions — Retro (9 core strategies and 3 exchanges: Kraken, binanceUS, and Gemini), Themed (premium UI with the core strategies), and Elite (all 25 strategies across 13 exchanges). Everything runs locally, which the site highlights as a big advantage over cloud bots: no sharing credentials, no risk of server outages affecting your trades, and full ownership after the one-time purchase. The homepage also stresses built-in risk management like per-trade stop losses, session caps, trailing stops, and an automatic reset trigger that restarts the strategy after exits. It mentions a “5-step accumulation engine” that scales into positions gradually instead of dumping everything at once, plus an “intelligent unified sell anchor.”

The site positions this for power users who want to avoid renting tools forever. No hype about guaranteed profits — just straightforward claims about local execution, WebSocket data feeds, and real-time limit order placement on the supported exchanges. I’m interested to hear if that local-only approach has worked well for anyone in practice, especially during volatile periods or exchange maintenance windows.

Now, the real meat is on the strategies page. It lays out nine core automated strategies that come with the Retro and Themed editions (Elite unlocks 25 total). Here’s what’s listed verbatim from the page, along with the universal settings that apply to all of them:

Universal settings include timeframe selection (1m up to 1d candles), trade size (cash amount or percentage of session budget with caps), stop loss options (per-trade, per-session, trailing), reset trigger for 24/7 operation, and advanced parameters like historical candle counts for indicators.

The nine core strategies are:

RSI – Buys when RSI drops below the oversold level and sells above overbought. Customizable RSI period, levels, etc. Best for volatile markets with clear swings.

MACD – Signals on bullish/bearish crossovers. Fast, slow, and signal periods adjustable. Good for trending markets on higher timeframes.

Trend Following – Multi-confirmation using moving averages and RSI filter. Low-frequency for sustained trends.

Mean Reversion – Buys below lower deviation band, sells above upper. EMA-based.

Momentum Trading – Enters on price surges above a trigger percentage in a lookback period.

Scalping – High-frequency limit orders with small profit targets. Currently the one running in the live demo.

Grid Trading – Places a grid of buy/sell orders in a defined price range for range-bound markets.

Market Making – Quotes buy/sell limits around mid-price to capture the spread.

Arbitrage – Exploits price differences between exchanges (e.g., Kraken vs. binanceUS) with minimum profit and latency checks.

Then Elite adds 16 more: EMA Spread, MACD Histogram, SMA Cross, Volatility Breakout, ADX Filter, Step Gain, Bollinger Bands, DCA (Dollar Cost Averaging), Grid-DCA Hybrid, Regime Switching, Pair Trading, Portfolio Rebalancing, TSA (Time Series Analysis), TSSL (Trailing Stop-Loss Ladder), Gain Strategy, and Emotionless Strategy. Each has specific parameters and “best for” notes — everything from adaptive regime detection to statistical pair trading.

The page also details how you can tweak everything in the advanced tab, including linking TradingView webhooks for custom signals. It feels very configurable without being overwhelming. Question for the group: If you were to pick one strategy to start with on the core list, which would it be and why? Has anyone backtested similar indicator-based approaches locally and found certain parameters (like the default RSI candle count of 624) make a big difference in live conditions?

submitted by /u/Patriot_tech
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