Stocks Represent Ownership
Buying a stock means buying a small ownership stake in a company. In this simulation, success comes from researching the company rather than recognizing a real-world brand.
Four Simulated Years • One Semester
A fictional long-term investing game built around research, market news, leadership decisions, and portfolio strategy. Every school day advances the market by several simulated weeks, while lighter quote movement keeps the board active during the day.
Buying a stock means buying a small ownership stake in a company. In this simulation, success comes from researching the company rather than recognizing a real-world brand.
Your leaderboard score is cash + the current value of every holding. Buying turns cash into equity. Selling turns equity back into cash.
Study price history, leadership, financial clues, and news. Diversify across sectors. Think across simulated years, not just one noisy market move.
Fresh fictional news gives clues about companies, sectors, and the broader market.
A clean pulse check on the state of the current season.
Leaderboard performance matters, but it is not the whole market. Compare players, broad index direction, and company-specific news before reacting.
See where players are concentrating value, then decide whether the crowd is right or simply crowded.