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Forex Trading Game

Trade a currency pair both ways. Go long if you think the rate will rise or short if you think it will fall on simulated EUR/MGD, then close to bank your pips. $5,000 play money, no sign-up, no real risk.

Equity
$5,000.00
Open P/L
$0.00
Return (ROI)
+0.00%
Ticks left
0 / 140
💱 EUR/MGD · simulated · flat 1.1000

How the forex trading game works

This forex trading game lets you trade a single simulated currency pair, EUR/MGD, with $5,000 of play money. The exchange rate ticks roughly once a second using a low-volatility, range-bound random-walk model — the gentle, mean-reverting rhythm typical of major FX pairs. Unlike a stock game, you trade both directions: go long to profit when the rate rises, or short to profit when it falls.

An exchange rate of 1.1000 means one euro buys 1.10 of the quote currency. When you open a position you pick a direction and a number of units; your open P/L then grows or shrinks with every pip (the fourth decimal) until you close. The gold dashed line on the chart marks your entry rate so you always see your break-even.

The FX loop: read the trend → go long or short → ride the pips → close to lock the result. Currencies trend in ranges, so patience beats over-trading.

Long vs short on a currency pair

go long close = pips gained

Each grid step up from your entry line is profit on a long (and a loss on a short). Reverse the chart and the mirror is true — that two-way symmetry is the heart of FX.

Forex trading tips for the simulator

Reality check: real forex trading uses leverage that magnifies both gains and losses, carries spreads and overnight costs, and the large majority of retail FX accounts lose money. This is a free skill game with a fictional rate, not financial advice — see investor.gov.

Want a different market? Trade volatile coins in the crypto trading simulator, go long stocks in the stock market simulator, or learn the two-way mindset in what is short selling.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is a forex trading game?

It is a risk-free simulator for trading a currency pair. You go long or short a simulated exchange rate with play money to learn how FX moves and how a long or short position makes or loses money — no broker and no real funds.

What does going long or short mean here?

Going long means you profit if the rate rises; going short means you profit if it falls. You pick a direction and a position size, then close the trade to lock in your gain or loss.

What is a pip?

A pip is the smallest standard move in a currency pair, usually the fourth decimal place (0.0001). The rate in this game is quoted to four decimals so you can watch it tick pip by pip.

Is real money or a real currency rate used?

No. The exchange rate is a seeded random-walk simulation and all balances are play money saved in your browser. It is a free educational game, not a live rate, and not financial advice.

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