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A traditional trading interface stops being useful the moment you’re holding a position. The buy panel goes grey, your token disappears from the feed, and you’re left refreshing a portfolio page wondering what’s happening. Dequan does the opposite: the moment you buy, the trade comes alive.

What the Racing Lanes look like

Your active positions appear as lanes overlaid on the Pump Zone field. Each lane is a horizontal track. Your trade is a runner on that track. As the token moves in price, your runner glides forward (winning) or backward (losing) in real time. The position is your outcome, not the token’s price. Two trades on the same token entered at different prices have different lane positions because their PnL is different. Each lane shows:
  • Symbol & current multipleCOPE 2.4×, the simplest possible signal
  • Entry-versus-now visual — how far you’ve travelled along the lane
  • Milestone flags+10%, +25%, +50%, +100%, +200%. The runner passes them as you cross
  • One-tap exits25%, 50%, 75%, 100% partial sells live directly on the lane
  • Risk badges — drain warning, stale quote, low confidence, all surfaced inline
You don’t open a portfolio page. You don’t look up your trade. You watch the lane.

Why this changes how you trade

There are two failure modes for retail traders holding meme tokens:

The Frozen Trader

You bought, the price went up 80%, and you didn’t sell because you were waiting for “more.” The trade rounded over and you exited at break-even or worse. Classic frozen-trader pattern.

The Panic Exiter

You bought, the price ticked down 12%, and you panic-sold the bottom. Token recovered ten minutes later. Classic loss aversion.
Both failures share a root cause: the trade is invisible while you hold it. You’re refreshing a page, doing math, second-guessing. Racing Lanes makes the trade present. The runner is moving. Milestones flash as you cross them. You see in your peripheral vision when the runner stalls. The decision to take profits stops being a math problem and becomes a response to motion. That alone changes outcomes more than any signal could.

Milestones, captured live

The lanes have flag markers at meaningful percentage gains. When your runner crosses one, the field celebrates — a flash, a small toast, the milestone is captured. The flag stays planted as a visual reminder that this trade has at least made it that far. Captures are throttled and de-spammed: you won’t get five flag captures in five seconds during volatility. The system uses hysteresis so a milestone only counts when it’s been held cleanly for a moment. This is not gamification for the sake of dopamine. It is structured feedback for a part of trading that almost always lacks it. Most traders never know what their average peak-percentage-captured looks like. After a few sessions on Dequan, you know exactly.

One-tap exits on the lane

Traditional exits require a sequence: open holdings → find token → click sell → choose amount → confirm. Five steps, every one a place where you might hesitate. Lane exits are one tap.
  • 25 → sell a quarter
  • 50 → sell half
  • 75 → sell three-quarters
  • Take Profit → sell everything
The button is on the lane. Your finger is already there. The transaction is dispatched immediately and your runner reacts. Behind the scenes, exits use the same pre-execution warmup and parallel landing as buys. They are not slower because they’re faster to initiate — they’re faster end-to-end.

What the lane tells you about the trade

The lane carries continuously updated metadata that you’d otherwise have to dig for:
Cue on the laneWhat it means
Runner moves smoothly forwardToken is appreciating, quote is fresh
Runner stutters / freezesQuote is stale; live price hasn’t arrived
Runner sinking visiblyLive PnL turning negative
Red liquidity badgePool is draining — see drain detection
Low-confidence badgeRecent quote is unreliable; treat estimate as approximate
Milestone flashCrossed a percentage threshold
Pit state (“pending”)A sell is in flight but not yet confirmed
Pit state (“retry”)A sell failed; tap to try again immediately
You can hover any lane for a deeper readout: hold time, exact PnL %, fees paid, route used, and the chart popout if you want to study what’s happening.

Defaults & customisation

Racing Lanes appear automatically when you have at least one active holding. You can:
  • Collapse them to a thin strip if you want full field visibility
  • Hide them entirely (the system remembers your preference)
  • Choose lane sort — by gain, by entry time, by symbol
  • Choose milestone style — adaptive (recommended) or fixed thresholds

Why the racing metaphor isn’t a gimmick

We tested the obvious alternatives. A list of holdings underneath the field. A floating widget. A separate panel. In every iteration, traders held longer than they should have or sold earlier than they meant to. The information was there but the response cue wasn’t. The lane works because human attention is built for moving objects in shared space. When your runner crosses a milestone in the same field where you saw a token launching ten minutes ago, your brain treats the two events as part of one coherent narrative. You stop calculating and start reacting. Your trades land in the meaningful range — somewhere between “frozen” and “panic” — much more often. That is the one job of any trading interface, and the Racing Lanes are the only thing in this category that does it.

Continue → Milestones & outcome cards

How every trade ends with a one-screen review.