You seems to be kidding or trolling usHow would you define real, because am sure there is a purpose why demo was created or designed in the market..

You seems to be kidding or trolling usHow would you define real, because am sure there is a purpose why demo was created or designed in the market..

I feel newbies should start first with demo trading before they go real, this will help them know more about the market and how to trade practically.
Newbies are having problem of earning money which is not possible in this business as they think. So they fail.
Genuine question, not trying to be condescending. I really want to know what the catch is or where people are getting hung up. Background: I started practicing forex trading as a hobby a couple weeks ago using TDAmeritrade's thinkorswim and then with a practice account on Oanda (TD won't let me trade forex with my amount of money). I haven't started trading real money yet. I wanted to make sure I knew what I'm getting into.
This is certainly true of Thinkorswim's simulator. I think simulators serve two purposes. One is to get people familiar with the software; the other is to sucker people by making it seem easy to make money day trading. If you want to make money day trading, an absolute requirement is to use a platform that gets you into the queue near the front or use market orders. Otherwise you are guaranteed that the market will be moving against you by the time your order is filled. You can not use a broker that holds your orders on their server.Demo account fills are a joke.
You can buy on the bid and sell the offer all day on those simulators.