Round reader, simulator, and field notes
BTC virtual trading and KBO Polymarket dashboard
PolyDashboard tracks short BTC Up/Down market rounds and keeps the important pieces on one page: live market prices, BTC reference movement, round timing, recent chart history, gap behavior, and a paper trading simulator. It is built for reviewing a round while it is happening, then looking back at the decision after the round closes.
The KBO Polymarket lab compares model win probability with market prices, so baseball markets can be reviewed beside pre-game context, current pricing, and matchup notes.
The site is not trying to look like a newsroom or a generic finance blog. It is a working dashboard with written notes around the tools, so a visitor can understand what each panel is doing before using the simulator.
What the dashboard does
- Live BTC round view: follow BTC Up/Down virtual trading prices, bid and ask movement, round progress, and recent round history.
- Paper trading simulator: practice entries, exits, position sizing, and review flow with virtual balance only.
- KBO Polymarket analysis: compare KBO model win probability with live market pricing and game context.
- Z-Index notes: compare the current setup with similar historical moments without treating the score as a signal service.
- Chart context: read BTC reference movement, price gaps, and previous rounds next to the live market view.
How the BTC Up/Down dashboard works
The live screen separates market prices from reference prices. Market prices show what the public market is quoting. BTC reference movement gives context for why those quotes may be changing. The gap and Z-Index sections are there to slow the user down and make the round easier to review after the fact.
KBO Polymarket lab
The KBO page is a market review surface for comparing team context, model win probability, and Polymarket pricing. It is designed for reading the market, not for promising outcomes.
Built for review, not promises
PolyDashboard is not a broker, exchange, wallet, order-execution service, or financial adviser. The simulator uses virtual balance and does not place real orders. Public data sources can be delayed, unavailable, or incorrect, so important information should be checked against the original source.