Why Crypface Is Different
Crypface is not just a screen full of signals. It puts backtesting, optimization, live market context, signal quality tools, and Spike Radar in one place.
It also includes the proprietary indicators CrypStack, CrypEdge, CrypFast, and PressureV1.
The idea is simple: you can quickly see what the market is doing now, how a signal did recently, and whether the current setup still looks worth your attention.
1) Instant Read
Bias: the app's quick read of the overall market direction right now.
Clarity: how clean or messy that read looks. Higher clarity means the signals agree better.
Breadth: shows whether many coins are participating and whether that participation is mostly up or down.
Leadership: shows who is driving the move most: majors or alts.
Flow: shows whether recent short-term buying or selling pressure is stronger.
Leverage: shows whether futures positioning looks supportive, neutral, or risky.
1D change: the mini bar and label show the net direction of each factor versus 24 hours ago.
2) Power Line, backtest & optimization
This is your main chart. It helps you quickly see whether the move looks steady, weak, or starting to change.
You can view it as Power Line (simple line view) or Power Candle (candle view).
How to read it: calmer sections usually mean the move is more stable, while red sections often appear when the move is accelerating or when the market is hitting an important turning point.
The default EMA ribbon is a group of moving average lines shown together.
It is useful as a quick check to see whether your trade still looks healthy or is starting to lose strength.
CrypStack
CrypStack is an extended EMA ribbon designed to behave like a moving support and resistance map.
When many EMA layers gather in the same area, that zone matters more. Green means support is stacked under price, red means resistance is stacked above price, and blue means structure is mixed and the market is no longer clearly leaning one way.
It is not there to call entries. Its real job is to answer "where are we right now?" once you are already in a position: is momentum broadening, tightening, weakening, or starting to regain strength. Very few indicators transmit the feeling of the price curve as clearly as CrypStack.
P&L Backtest (Reality Check)
This shows how the selected indicator would have done on past price action for the current ticker and timeframe.
The P&L uses compounding, which means gains and losses carry forward into the next trades. Standard trading fees are also included.
Start rule: if the indicator is already clearly pointing one way after warm-up, the first trade can start from that direction.
End rule: if a trade is still open on the last candle, the model closes it on the final bar so the shown P&L is complete.
Special short guard: all modeled short trades use a built-in -20% stop-loss. If a closing bar breaches that level, the backtest exits the short at the guard price (plus fees) to avoid squeeze-driven equity wipeouts.
Hint: On very short timeframes like 1m and 5m, fees matter more and results are harder to maintain !
Auto-Optimizer (Parameter Search)
One click tests different settings and keeps the best setup for the current ticker, timeframe, and indicator.
Use this as a tool to compare ideas and fine-tune settings, not as a promise of future results.
Optimization Snapshot
This compares the Default setup with the Optimized setup for the current ticker and timeframe.
Important: Win, Exp, PF, DD, R/DD, Edge, N, and Reliability are only calculated after you click OPTIMIZE.
LONG ONLY: shows how the same setup would perform using long trades only. Click again to go back to normal view.
EDGE: shows whether the optimized result still looks solid in nearby settings, or whether it may be too fragile.
Win: percent of winning trades.
Exp: average return per trade.
PF: how much the winners made compared with the losers.
DD: biggest drop from a peak.
R/DD: return compared with drawdown.
N: number of completed trades.
RELIABILITY: an internal quality label based on recent backtest stats. It is not a guarantee.
Other Technical Indicators
CrypEdge helps spot when market pressure is starting to change.
CrypFast reacts faster when a move may be running out of steam and turning.
PressureV1 shows when buyers or sellers are clearly taking control.
EMA Cross: can hint that the trend is changing.
Triple Cross: gives a cleaner trend read by using three moving averages together.
RSI Regime: shows whether buyers or sellers are stronger right now.
MACD Trend: shows trend direction and whether the move is gaining or losing strength.
Bollinger Revert: looks for moves that may have gone too far and could pull back.
Donchian 20 Break: looks for breaks above or below the recent range.
ADX + DI Regime: shows whether the trend looks strong or messy, and which side currently has the edge.
Supertrend: helps show when the market may have changed direction.
Signals 🔻
You will often see the same signal repeated several times in a row. That does not mean a new trade every time. It simply means the indicator still agrees with the same state. If the signal goes flat, there is no active position.
Signal Mining
Signal Mining searches for fresh setups with strong Edge, strong Reliability, and solid historical P&L.
It tests tradable Binance USDT pairs, gives more attention to liquid and active names, and revalidates setups on new candles to keep signals fresh.
3) Spike Radar
Spike Radar tries to catch coins that have sudden strong moves.
It compares the newest scan with recent scans and only keeps fresh moves that look meaningful.
You can tap any row to load that ticker instantly in your main chart.
4) Crypbot Radar
Crypbot shows the CURRENT MARKET STATE, not what happened over the last few hours/days. It gives one live read: Strength, Neutral, or Weakness.
Example: a coin can be up 10% in the last 24hrs and Crypbot can show "Neutral" if the move has cooled down and CURRENT conditions no longer look strong.
Whale Corner
Whale Corner tries to show which side is pushing large trades right now.
In every trade, there is a buyer and a seller. But one side is the aggressive side: the one taking the trade immediately.
If large aggressive buys dominate, bigger players are pushing upward.
If large aggressive sells dominate, bigger players are pushing downward.
This helps you see who is driving the move, not just who is present.
Sentiment & Mood
This shows community votes for expected direction (bullish or bearish) and overall mood.
Risk Desk / Current Regime / Market Scanner
Risk Desk: setup risk for the current ticker, timeframe, and indicator. Risk Boundary is the level where the setup starts to look wrong. Buffer is the distance to that level. Room turns the same distance into a rough time-equivalent based on typical recent movement. Since Signal / Init Buffer % shows the current performance since the signal began as raw percent return plus the same move expressed as a percent of the initial buffer captured at signal start. Vol Heat / Avg Bar Range combines the current volatility regime versus baseline with the average recent bar move as a percent of price. Signal Age tells you whether the setup still looks fresh or already stretched.
Current Regime: compact read of what is driving the move now. Regime confidence shows how cleanly the market inputs agree: trend, flow, book, whales, and participation. Driver is the strongest force. Next Watch is the key level or condition to monitor. Signals (A)lign/(C)onflict is the tradeability read. A2/C2 means two active inputs align with the regime and two conflict with it, so the read is mixed rather than clean. Net whale vol (10) shows whether the selected ticker's last ten large prints leaned net buy or net sell, and Last whale trade shows the latest one.
Market Scanner + CoinGecko Line: a fast way to spot active movers and trending coins.
Market Metrics: this block adds quick market context like Fear & Greed, BTC Dominance, ETH Dominance, Alts Share, and % Alts > BTC. That main breadth number shows how many liquid alts are beating BTC over 24h, which is a simple way to judge whether alt participation looks broad or weak.
The top metrics boxes add more quick readings: % Alts Green shows how many liquid alts are up on the day, % Alts > BTC shows how many liquid alts are beating BTC, % Alts > ETH shows how many liquid alts are beating ETH, and Median Alt 24h shows the middle daily move across that liquid alt basket.
Inside Market Scanner, the ETH vs BTC numbers help you compare the two majors directly: the current 24h spread, a simple ETH/BTC Bias, and ETH vs BTC Momentum, which shows whether ETH is gaining or losing ground versus BTC from one scanner update to the next.
Reset To Default
This restores the main settings and saved tickers back to their default values.
Crypface: Signal Lab for Real Markets
Unlike most dashboards, Crypface is built as a full decision engine, not a simple signal panel: automatic P&L backtesting, 1-click optimization, proprietary signal-noise reduction, Reliability, Edge consistency, live Crypbot context scoring and a Spike Radar are all integrated in one loop. It also provides the proprietary indicators CrypStack, CrypEdge, CrypFast and PressureV1, differentiated from standard indicators by focusing on structural market mapping, regime-pressure transitions, high-reactivity reversal behavior, and live pressure-state detection instead of only lagging triggers.
Workflow: detect current regime, validate indicator behavior on past price data, then optimize parameters for the active ticker/timeframe and compare default vs optimized instantly.
Crypface moves beyond static charts and becomes a real-time decision cockpit.
How To Read It
1) Instant Read
Bias: weighted top-line market state built from breadth, leadership, spot flow, and derivatives.
Clarity: agreement-quality of that read. It rises when the active layers align and weakens when the signal mix is noisy or contradictory.
Breadth: cross-sectional participation across the liquid Binance alt basket, centered on alts vs BTC, alts vs ETH, green share, and median alt behavior, with the pill combining participation extent and direction.
Leadership: who is actually leading the move across cap buckets, refined by ETH/BTC relative strength and alt-share context.
Flow: spot microstructure layer built from taker aggression, book lean, initiative, and relative volume behavior.
Leverage: futures positioning layer built from funding, open-interest trend, taker ratio, crowding, and squeeze-risk context.
1D change: the mini bar and label show the net direction of each factor versus 24 hours ago.
2) Power Line, backtest & optimization
Power Line is your main price-path view. It is designed to make changes in structure, pacing, and short-term pressure easier to spot without overloading the chart.
The same engine can be visualized in two modes: Power Line or Power Candle.
Read the chart as a structure/pace layer first: quieter sections usually reflect steadier behavior, while red sections show up often during trend accelerations or around more meaningful turning zones.
Use it to read the move itself first, then combine it with the selected indicator and backtest context.
EMA Fibonacci Ribbon (Default)
The EMA Fibonacci Ribbon layers multiple exponential moving averages using Fibonacci spacing to create a continuous visual view of trend alignment.
Many traders monitor different moving averages (20, 50, 100, 200, etc.) to judge direction and momentum. The ribbon acts as a synthesis of those perspectives, combining several EMA relationships into one coherent visual framework.
As a standalone signal engine, the ribbon is not designed to generate optimized entries. Its strength lies in visual feedback.
When you are already in a position, it provides one of the clearest and most visually satisfying ways to sense how your trade is behaving — whether momentum feels smooth and expanding, tightening and unstable, or gradually losing strength.
It does not attempt to predict turning points. It helps you evaluate the quality and behavior of an ongoing move at a glance.
CrypStack
CrypStack extends the EMA Ribbon into a moving support and resistance field rather than a simple trend overlay.
Each layer acts like a live level. When many layers compress into the same zone, that area becomes structurally important. Green shows stacked support under price, red shows stacked resistance above price, and blue shows a market that is no longer cleanly aligned.
Its value is qualitative more than predictive: it shows whether momentum is expanding, compressing, fading, or rebuilding, which makes it one of the clearest "where are we?" indicators in the deck. It is best used to read the health and texture of a move once you are already positioned, not as a rigid entry engine.
Auto-Optimizer (Parameter Search)
One click tests different parameter sets and keeps the best setup for the current ticker/timeframe/indicator context.
Optimization Snapshot
The snapshot is context-locked (ticker + timeframe + indicator) and compares Default vs Optimized on the same backtest window.
Important: Win, Exp, PF, DD, R/DD, Edge, N and Reliability are computed on demand and are available only after clicking OPTIMIZE for that context.
LONG ONLY: shows performance and statistics for a long-only equivalent strategy (no short positions) across both snapshot stats and the indicator P&L chart. Toggle off to return to full long+short view.
EDGE: local robustness metric from neighboring parameter sets around the optimized parameters. Higher values indicate stronger parameter stability; low values indicate likely sensitivity/overfit risk.
Win: hit rate across completed trades.
Exp (Expectancy): mean return per completed trade.
PF (Profit Factor): gross profit divided by gross loss.
DD (Max Drawdown): deepest equity drop from a prior peak.
R/DD: total return divided by absolute drawdown (risk-adjusted efficiency).
N: completed trade sample size.
RELIABILITY: derived from expectancy, PF, R/DD, and sample sufficiency; it is a model quality label, not a guarantee and not a probability of future performance.
Indicator P&L Backtest
This section replays the selected indicator on past price data and builds a rolling equity line from those signals.
The simulation is compounding (equity rolls gains/losses into subsequent trades) and standard trading fees are included to increase consistency and realism.
Backtest start rule: once warm-up is complete, if the indicator is already in a confirmed direction, that carried (re-confirmed) stance can open the first modeled position.
Backtest end rule: if exposure is still open on the final candle, the engine applies a theoretical close at the last bar (including exit fee) so reported P&L is fully realized.
Special short guard: all modeled short trades use a built-in -20% stop-loss. If a closing bar breaches that level, the backtest exits the short at the guard price (plus fees) to avoid squeeze-driven equity wipeouts.
Hint: On very short timeframes (1m and 5m), consistently beating transaction costs is significantly harder.
When the signal stays in the same direction, the model keeps the same directional exposure. It does not stack multiple positions just because the same signal repeats.
When the signal goes flat, exposure goes flat (no position). During these phases, the P&L line can look flat until a new directional signal appears.
Use this as a discovery and calibration tool to compare behavior across ticker/timeframe/indicator combinations, not as a guarantee of future results.
3) Other Technical Indicators
CrypEdge is a proprietary momentum–velocity oscillator that detects structural shifts in market pressure.
CrypFast is a proprietary high-reactivity reversal engine designed to capture selected exhaustion pivots and fast direction shifts.
PressureV1 is a proprietary pressure-state signal designed to highlight when directional pressure is becoming meaningfully imbalanced and no longer looks neutral.
EMA Cross: trend-shift trigger. Fast but can fake out in choppy ranges.
Triple Cross: multi-average trend confirmation (fast/mid/slow), generally steadier but slower than single-cross triggers.
RSI Regime: momentum pressure. Shows whether buyers or sellers are pressing harder.
MACD Trend: momentum direction + trend acceleration/deceleration.
Bollinger Revert: mean-reversion behavior when price stretches too far from average.
Donchian 20 Break: breakout behavior through recent channel highs/lows.
ADX + DI Regime: ADX is a trend-strength meter (higher = stronger trend, lower = choppy market). DI+ shows buyer-side strength. DI- shows seller-side strength. If DI+ is above DI-, buyers have the edge; if DI- is above DI+, sellers have the edge.
Supertrend: a trend-follow line based on ATR. ATR simply means average candle move size (how much price usually moves). Supertrend uses that volatility context and flips when trend regime likely changed.
Signals 🔻: you will often see several identical signals in a row. That does not mean multiple new entries each time but shows that the indicator is re-confirming the same active state. If the signal goes flat, there is no active position (flat). On an open candle, a signal can still flip intrabar; the official/confirmed signal is the one at candle close for the selected timeframe.
Signal Mining
Signal Mining searches for fresh setups with strong Edge, strong Reliability, and solid historical P&L.
It builds its test universe from tradable Binance USDT pairs, favors liquid and active names, and revalidates ticker/timeframe/indicator contexts on fresh candles.
Why These 13 Indicators
Crypface does not try to include "everything". These 14 tools (Power Line + 13 indicators) were selected to cover different market behaviors with low overlap: trend (EMA Ribbon, EMA Cross, Triple Cross, Supertrend), momentum/velocity (CrypEdge, MACD, RSI, ADX/DI, PressureV1), tactical reversal detection (CrypFast), volatility/mean-reversion (Bollinger), and breakout structure (Donchian).
So instead of 20 indicators saying the same thing in different ways, you get a compact set that is easier to compare, optimize, and trust in live conditions.
This balance was chosen for three reasons: coverage (different regimes), redundancy control (less duplicated signals), and real-time robustness (stable enough for continuous frontend updates).
4) Spike Radar
Spike Radar is built to find new activity bursts, not to list coins that were already active hours ago.
It uses rolling scans and checks whether the latest jump is clearly bigger than recent normal behavior, with noise and cooldown guards.
It does not use same-time 24h comparison.
Every row is clickable and loads that ticker directly into your main engine for quick follow-up.
5) Crypbot Radar = Condensed Market State
Crypbot is a multi-factor weighted model, not a standalone indicator. It fuses trend structure, trade flow, order-book pressure, whale behavior, and activity into one live bias score that summarizes current market regime.
How the signal is computed:
Step 1 - Normalize inputs: Fib EMA signal from a fast internal 1h frame (-1/0/+1), Market Force, Market Activity, Whale Net Flow, Taker Buy Ratio, Trade Delta, and Order Book Imbalance are converted to a common scale.
Step 2 - Weight inputs: Fib EMA xx%, Market Force xx%, Whale Flow xx%, Taker Ratio xx%, Trade Delta xx%, Market Activity xx%, Order Book Imbalance xx%. These weights are proprietary.
Step 3 - Smooth noise: the new radar value is blended with the previous one (xx% previous + xx% new) so the state does not whip around on every tick. These weights are proprietary
Step 4 - Label regime: score > +0.24 = Strength, score < -0.24 = Weakness, otherwise Neutral.
Step 5 - Confidence: confidence rises when components agree in the same direction and when volatility/volume context confirms movement. It is a model-alignment gauge, not certainty.
So one bullish meter alone does not force a bullish radar. Crypbot waits for broader alignment.
Crypbot Meters
Taker Buy Ratio: share of aggressive buy-side execution in recent bars.
Trade Delta: net aggressor flow (buy notional minus sell notional) from live trades.
Order Book Imbalance: near-price bid/ask pressure snapshot from current liquidity.
Volatility Regime: current ATR versus baseline ATR (calm, normal, or high movement).
Volume Z-Score: how unusual current volume is versus its rolling baseline.
Market Force: urgency/aggression of participation on selected ticker.
Market Activity: current activity intensity versus that ticker's normal pace.
Wall Sniffer: smoothed bid/ask wall pressure, useful as context, not as a standalone trigger.
Whale Corner
Whale Corner tracks large Live trades and builds net flow while Crypface is open.
It also estimates which side was the aggressor (the side that "hit" market orders) using trade-side metadata. This gives a real-time clue about whether large players are actively pushing buy or sell pressure.
What Is Ticker-Specific vs Global
Most engines are ticker-specific (selected ticker + timeframe). Whale context uses a small basket (active ticker + major pairs), and the News Feed is global context.
Sentiment + Mood (Crowd Psychology)
Sentiment: what users expect next (Bullish/Bearish).
Mood: how users feel (1-100), independent from direction.
Both are synced globally and each has a 1-hour cooldown per device.
Risk Desk / Current Regime / Market Scanner
Risk Desk: setup-scoped risk for the active ticker/timeframe/indicator. ATR here means average bar range. Risk Boundary is the structural failure line, Buffer is the percent distance to it, Room converts that same distance into an approximate time-equivalent based on typical recent movement, and Since Signal / Init Buffer % shows current signal P&L as both raw percent and the same move expressed as a percent of the initial buffer captured when the signal started. Vol Heat / Avg Bar Range shows current volatility versus baseline together with the average recent bar size as a percent of price. Signal Age shows how mature the active signal has become.
Current Regime: local regime synthesis for the active ticker/timeframe/indicator. Regime confidence is local alignment, not the global Crypbot confidence, and it is built from market inputs like trend, flow, book pressure, whales, and participation. Driver is the strongest aligned force. Next Watch is the condition most likely to confirm or weaken the read. Signals (A)lign/(C)onflict summarizes tradeability through aligned/conflicting counts. A2/C2 means two active inputs align with the regime and two conflict with it, so the tape is mixed rather than clean. Net whale vol (10) shows whether the selected ticker's last ten whale prints leaned net buy or net sell, and Last whale trade shows the most recent qualifying large print with its suspected aggressor side.
Market Scanner + CoinGecko Line: fast discovery of active movers and trending assets.
Market Metrics: adds macro context to the scanner with Fear & Greed, BTC/ETH dominance, Alts Share, total market cap, and the promoted % Alts > BTC breadth read at the top. That score measures the share of liquid Binance alts outperforming BTC over the last 24h, which is useful to judge whether alt participation is broadening or fading.
The three companion top pills refine that same breadth view: % Alts Green measures the share of the liquid alt basket trading positive on the day, % Alts > ETH measures the share outperforming ETH, and Median Alt 24h gives the median 24h return across the basket.
The scanner’s ETH vs BTC block adds a direct major-vs-major relative-strength layer: the current 24h spread between ETH and BTC, an ETH/BTC Bias state, and ETH vs BTC Momentum, which measures how that spread is changing from one scanner sample to the next.
Reset To Default
Restores core settings and saved tickers back to default values.