🎉 Gate Square — Share Your Funniest Crypto Moments & Win a $100 Joy Fund!
Crypto can be stressful, so let’s laugh it out on Gate Square.
Whether it’s a liquidation tragedy, FOMO madness, or a hilarious miss—you name it.
Post your funniest crypto moment and win your share of the Joy Fund!
💰 Rewards
10 creators with the funniest posts
Each will receive $10 in tokens
📝 How to Join
1⃣️ Follow Gate_Square
2⃣️ Post with the hashtag #MyCryptoFunnyMoment
3⃣️ Any format works: memes, screenshots, short videos, personal stories, fails, chaos—bring it on.
📌 Notes
Hashtag #MyCryptoFunnyMoment is requi
The Trader Who Reinvented Himself at 87: The 5 Lessons from Fujimoto That No One Tells You
Lost 75% of his fortune at 66. At 87 he had $12M. Shigeru Fujimoto is not just another “Japanese Warren Buffett”—he is the living example that in the markets it is not about luck, but about intelligent obsession.
His real secret? While others follow trends, he ignores them.
The 5 rules that changed everything:
1. Operate only what you understand Fujimoto never bet on chance. Cars, semiconductors, trading companies—sectors where he had an information advantage. Period.
2. IPOs are gold mines… if you have patience He won ¥200M ($1.3M) in IPOs with a simple technique: avoid the initial chaos, enter when the hysteria drops, exit when the momentum runs out. While everyone buys at the opening, he buys in the silence.
3. The “hot tips” are already priced in This hurts: following gurus is a trap. Their moves are strategy, not advice. Doing your own research is not optional—it’s mandatory.
4. Obsession is the true weapon Fujimoto did not just look at charts. He observed freight trains to predict logistics stocks. He analyzed daily flows. Trading was his art, not his hobby. The deeper your focus, the sharper your instinct.
5. Losses are masters (if you listen to them) Lost everything in the 1995 earthquake. At 66, started from scratch learning online trading without even knowing how to use a computer. Result: $12M comeback.
The lesson: The best traders don't play—they obsess. And they learn from every scar the market leaves them.