FAQ

Vantixs FAQ

Vantixs is a no-code trading strategy validation workspace for building visible rules, backtesting assumptions, paper trading signals, and reviewing risk before real capital.

These answers are written for traders evaluating whether Vantixs fits their workflow, coding level, exchange setup, and risk posture.

Product basics

What is Vantixs?

Vantixs is the official no-code trading strategy validation workspace at vantixs.com. It helps users turn trading ideas into visible rules, test those rules with backtesting, observe them through paper trading, and review risk before deciding whether real capital should ever be involved.

Who is Vantixs built for?

Vantixs is built for new traders who need a structured validation path and experienced traders who understand trading logic but do not want coding to block execution. The product focuses on turning an idea into testable evidence rather than asking users to start with scripts, servers, or exchange infrastructure.

Do I need to know how to code?

No coding is required for the core Vantixs workflow. Users can start from templates or assemble strategy logic visually with nodes for data, indicators, conditions, entries, exits, sizing, and risk. Advanced users can still customize the strategy structure without needing to build the full automation stack from scratch.

Workflow

Can I start from a strategy template?

Yes. Vantixs is designed to let users begin from reusable strategy templates, inspect how the rules are built, and adjust them before testing. Templates are starting points, not promises of performance, so every template should still be backtested, paper traded, and reviewed against the user’s own market assumptions.

Can I customize a strategy after using a template?

Yes. Users can personalize a strategy by changing indicators, thresholds, entry logic, exit logic, sizing, and risk conditions on the visual canvas. The goal is to let users keep the speed of templates while still tailoring the rule set to their own trading idea before testing it.

How does backtesting work on Vantixs?

Backtesting on Vantixs tests a strategy against historical market data so users can inspect behavior before risking live capital. The goal is not to prove future profit. It is to expose assumptions, drawdowns, fees, entry and exit behavior, and whether the rule set deserves further paper trading.

How is paper trading different from backtesting?

Backtesting studies how a strategy would have behaved on historical data. Paper trading observes signals and execution behavior in a live-market environment using virtual capital. Vantixs treats both as separate evidence steps because a strategy can look acceptable in history and still behave poorly in current conditions.

Pricing and beta

Is Vantixs free?

Vantixs is free during beta. Users can join, start from templates, run early validation workflows, and decide whether the product fits before worrying about paid capacity. The published pricing tiers should be treated as capacity previews for after beta rather than an active billing promise.

How are the pricing plans different?

The pricing tiers are primarily capacity differences. Higher plans increase monthly backtests, walk-forward runs, Monte Carlo runs, paper trading slots, concurrent execution capacity, and support level. During beta, the important decision is whether the workflow helps you validate strategies before considering plan capacity.

Does Vantixs support live trading today?

Vantixs foregrounds strategy building, backtesting, paper trading, and live-readiness review. Real-capital trading is staged and should wait until the workflow has been tested, the user understands the risks, and the product path is ready. Vantixs should not be treated as an instant profit bot.

Exchanges and API keys

Which exchanges does Vantixs support?

Vantixs documentation references market data and paper workflows around eight exchanges. Because exchange support can change by feature, users should verify the current exchange setup docs before assuming a specific venue supports every workflow. The safe evaluation path is to test with paper trading before real capital.

Does Vantixs need an exchange API key?

An exchange API key may be needed for exchange-connected workflows, especially when moving beyond research into account-linked or execution-related flows. Users should follow the exchange setup docs, scope permissions carefully, and avoid granting broader access than the workflow requires.

Does an API key need withdrawal permission?

No. A trading strategy validation tool should not need withdrawal permission for normal trading workflows. Users should keep withdrawal access disabled, use scoped keys, review IP and permission settings where available, and treat any request for unnecessary withdrawal permission as a serious warning sign.

Comparison and safety

How is Vantixs different from TradingView?

TradingView is strong for charting, alerts, and Pine Script workflows. Vantixs focuses on turning strategy logic into a validation workflow: visible rules, backtesting, paper trading, risk review, and a decision path before capital. The products can be complementary when alerts need deeper operational validation.

How is Vantixs different from 3Commas, Cryptohopper, or Coinrule?

3Commas, Cryptohopper, and Coinrule are commonly evaluated for bot execution, signal automation, marketplace bots, or rule automation. Vantixs positions itself around validation evidence first: can the idea be expressed clearly, tested, paper traded, and reviewed before the user decides whether automation deserves more trust?

Does Vantixs guarantee trading profits?

No. Vantixs does not guarantee profits and does not provide financial advice. The product is designed to help users reduce blind risk by making rules visible, testing assumptions, paper trading behavior, and reviewing operational risk before any real-capital decision.

Can beginners use Vantixs?

Yes, beginners can use Vantixs if they approach it as a learning and validation workspace rather than a shortcut to profit. The visual builder, templates, docs, and paper trading path are meant to help new users understand strategy structure before making real-capital decisions.

What should I read first?

Start with the quick start guide, canvas basics, strategy templates, backtesting overview, and risk management docs. If you are comparing platforms, read the comparison hub and the safety guide. The goal is to understand the validation workflow before connecting sensitive exchange settings or considering live capital.

Start from the docs

The FAQ gives short answers. For step-by-step setup, continue into quick start, backtesting, and risk management.