"Demotading is very bad...."
oh my gawhd I think I'm gonna throw up!
Baron, I know what I said about severely limiting my posts and staying in my own little part of Hell but THIS post (I'm quoting)... I just can't take it.
First of all, I'm Zoinz, no, wait a minute my keyboard stuck again. I am Coinz! the best mother*in' currency trader in this whole *in' WORLD!
and I want two of you boys, Korekupinget and Drasfs, to step up in line right now in front of me and WRITE me out a check equal to roughly 85% of your account balances! Account it as what you're gonna LOSE trading within the next 12 months, if you even make it
that long.
Why, you ask? I'll tell ya why.
First, I been trading your quaint little "forex" market for 18,000 brutal hours (apart from sleep...
that varied depending on who I was sleeping with..) and I'm gonna tell ya how to have the best chance of
avoiding the Grim Currency Reaper (me) trading in the Live forex market.
I have a main (live) trading account with at least 6 Sub-accounts - with open currency pair trades going every which way including up the a** of the wicked witch of the North (wait, maybe she was the hot one..
eh, I'll get into her a** later...).
OK...
Besides those Live accounts, in which some of them are running live tester trades with an extremely small amount of money committed to them, I have at least a DOZEN "demo" accounts that I use to run my main currency trading experiments - WELL before I ever graduate a trading structure to any live trading environments.
I've saved MORE money by blowing up demo accounts than both of you will EVER have in ANY of your live accounts and I don't care who you are!
*pants*
So, lesson: Korekupinget, if you want to someday be a bad a** "forex trader" (like me

), spend your first 6 months on a demo, then never, I repeat NEVER stop using demos to experiment with various trading strategies even after you begin trading a live account.
Listen to what my friend Mortysill says especially about properly handing Money and Trade management. My friend Kastro also makes great points.
Best to all,
The Coin
Quote from drasfs:
Thus far Im profitable and I didnt read a single book about forex, except a couple of questions to the live support section over at forex.com, on how the platform works.
Im just looking at graphs and reading other analyses,news,economic releases,forums and comments so I suggest you should do the same.
However, I started with demotrading for one week, but lost 50% of my account balance in one day and then I stopped and opened a live account with 1000 dollar.I knew it was because I didnt put enough effort into researching and analysing, as there was just fake money.
I do however have previous experience with stock trading, where I made 40% return in 3 months on a simulator without reading any books,but forex got my attention because of its liquidness and the leverage. I find Forex however harder to predict as I get the feeling that the market do everything it can to make you panic and always seems to behave in a way that goes against your common sense, in contrast to stock trading. For instance, USD/CHF decreased today so much, that probably made most traders who acted too emotionally to close their position on this currency pair, only to tipple increase within the next couple of minutes.. Even though currencies trend best, they do so in a decievful manner, that always try to shake off traders before a profitable move.
After you have been looking at the platform and researching like me 15 hours a day, you will soon get the feeling on how the currencies behave, and you will learn from your mistakes rapidly, or so ive. Ive only been live trading for 1.5 week, so I might just be a lucky bastard on his way to doom...but I hope not 
Demotading is very bad, as it might give a false picture, and you might act to rectlessly and dont invest enought time to research and you end up blowing your account and then say goodbye to forex trading.If it is a live account with your money at the stake and it gets serious and not something you play around with,you will be more careful and research more, and thus be able to make better decisions.