SpazzBot in plain terms
A short guide to setting up the bot, choosing wallets to copy, and reading your results.
What SpazzBot does
SpazzBot is a copy trading tool for Solana. You pick a small set of wallets that trade well, and the bot watches them for you around the clock. When one of them buys a token, the bot can buy the same token right away, then handle the exit using rules you set.
The idea is simple. Good traders are good at finding tokens early. SpazzBot lets you ride along with them without sitting at the screen all day.
There are two parts to doing this well. First, the bot has to see a target buy the instant it happens. Second, it has to act on that fast, before the price runs away. The rest of this guide walks through how to set it up and what each screen does.
Logging in
The dashboard is private, so the first thing you do is sign in. Sign in happens through Telegram, so only you and anyone you approve can reach it.
- Open the site. You land on the login screen.
- Click the login button. It opens a chat with the Telegram bot.
- Approve the request inside Telegram.
- You are sent straight to the Mirror page.
Your browser stays signed in after that, so you normally do this once. If you ever get sent back to the login screen, just approve again.
The Mirror page
Mirror is the main screen, and where you spend most of your time. It has two halves. On the left is the chart and the detail for whichever position you have selected. On the right is a live list of positions, newest on top.
When one of your targets buys a token, a new row shows up on the right. Click it to open its chart on the left.
The chart uses real candles and updates while you watch. On top of the candles you see markers. A green marker is a target wallet buying. A blue marker is your bot copying that buy. When a position closes you also see a sell marker. Hover any marker to see who it was, the size, and the price at that moment.
If more than one of your targets buys the same token, SpazzBot keeps it as a single entry instead of opening a copy for each one. You still get a marker for every target on the same chart, and the row shows a small count next to the wallet name.
Picking wallets to copy
The bot only copies wallets you tell it to follow. Who you copy is the most important choice you make, so it is worth spending time here. You manage your wallets in two places.
Scan
Scan lets you look up any wallet and see how it has actually done. Paste an address and you get its real profit, win rate, hold times, and more. Use it to decide whether a wallet is worth following before you add it.
Library
Library is your saved list of wallets. You can group wallets into folders, give them short names so you remember who is who, and sort them by real profit. When you find a wallet you like, add it to your targets from here.
To add a target quickly, open Settings, go to Targets, and either paste an address or import one straight from your Library.
Setting up the bot
Open the profile menu in the top right and click Settings. This is where you tell the bot how to trade.
Settings come in two layers. Global settings apply to every wallet you follow. You can also override any setting for a single wallet, which helps when one target trades very differently from the rest.
The options are grouped. Here are the ones you will touch most.
Entry filters
These decide which buys the bot copies. You can set a minimum buy size, skip tokens above or below a market cap, and skip a token you already hold.
Sizing
This decides how much you put into each copy. Use a fixed amount per trade, or a percentage.
Exits
This is the part that protects you. The bot can sell on its own, not just when the target sells.
- Stop loss sells if a token drops past a percent you set.
- Take profit sells part of the position at set gains, so you lock in winners as they run.
- Trailing stop follows the price up and sells if it falls back by a set amount.
- Hold timeout sells after a token has been held too long.
- Mirror exit sells when the target sells.
Every setting shows a short description, so you can read what it does before you turn it on.
Paper mode and live
There are two ways to run the bot.
Paper mode watches your targets and runs every rule, but it never spends real money. It is the safe way to test a setup and see how your wallets would have done. The board fills with simulated positions so you can judge the results.
Live mode places real orders. Use it once you trust your wallet list and your settings.
You switch between them in Settings under Mode. A new setup should always start in paper mode.
Some target wallets buy a token and then sit on it for days. To keep the board readable, a position that has stayed open for a few hours without an exit is cleared from the watch view. This is only about keeping the demo tidy. It does not change how the live bot manages a real position.
Reading your results
Each row in the positions list is one token.
Open positions are ones you still hold. They show the current value and how far up or down you are. Closed positions show how the trade ended and the profit or loss.
At the top of the list you get a running summary: how many are open, the unrealized profit on what you still hold, the realized profit on what you have closed, and your win rate.
For a full record, open the profile menu and click Trade history. Every trade is saved there and stays after you close the browser. Click any trade to see its full log, including the buy, the exit, and anything that happened along the way. A buy that was sent but did not land on chain is marked clearly, so a missed attempt is never counted as a real fill.
How the bot works
You do not need any of this to use SpazzBot, but here is what makes it quick and reliable.
Speed
The wallets that get into a token first pay the best price. Copiers who arrive late pay more, and sometimes become the exit liquidity for everyone else. SpazzBot reads target trades from a direct data feed instead of waiting on slow public sources, so it sees a buy the moment it lands.
Clean execution
When the bot copies a buy, it sizes the order and sends it through a fast, staked lane so the order lands quickly without paying for slow routes. It understands pump.fun and its pools directly, so it does not lean on a third party to build the trade.
Real exits
Most simple copy bots only sell when the target sells. SpazzBot adds stop losses, take profit steps, a trailing stop, and a hold timeout on top of that. A token that runs up and then fades does not give all of the gain back.
Honest numbers
The bot records what actually settled on chain, including fees and tips, not just what it meant to do. So the profit you see matches what really happened. This sounds obvious, but a lot of bots report the optimistic version and the real number ends up lower.
Per wallet tuning
Every target can have its own rules. A fast scalper and a slow swing trader should not be copied the same way, and you can set each one up on its own.
Tips
- Start in paper mode and let it run for a while before you trust a wallet.
- Follow a few good wallets rather than a long list of average ones. Who you copy matters more than anything else.
- Use Scan and the Library to rank wallets by real profit, and drop the ones that stop performing.
- Always set a stop loss. It is the simplest way to keep one bad token from undoing a good week.
That covers the basics. If something on the site behaves differently from this guide, it may have been updated since, so trust what is on the screen.