1. Accelerate
Hold the up arrow to build speed. Brake before steep drops.
Control a chart rider across a stock-price track. Throttle, brake, lean, jump, crash, and retry.
The demo uses a stock-like price path as terrain. Your rider is not animated automatically: you control speed, lean, and jumps while inertia decides whether the bike sticks the landing.
The game is not a trading signal. It makes volatility physical: climbs, drops, gaps, and recoveries become obstacles you can actually play through.
Hold the up arrow to build speed. Brake before steep drops.
Use left and right to rotate the rider before landing.
Reach the close without crashing to lock your time and score.
The old version just moved a marker along a line. This one waits for input, responds to acceleration, lean, airtime, and head hits, and only ends when you finish or crash.
The core verbs are throttle, brake, lean, jump, restart, and stop. After a crash, you can retry the run or stop the game and continue browsing the site.
The next version can add ticker tracks, crash-era packs, difficulty labels, and shareable scores. Those are product hooks, not copied article filler.
The chart becomes terrain. Price swings turn into climbs, drops, and recovery zones.
Pause the chart and choose what happens next. This is quick, repeatable, and easy to score.
Pick entry and exit points, then compare your timing against the full move.
If you heard about StonkRider, this is the broader category: chart movement turned into play.
Stock charts already have the ingredients of a game: momentum, risk, surprise, timing, and visible feedback. A good stock chart game makes those forces feel physical without pretending to be financial advice.
The reason a chart game can travel on social media is that every ticker has a story. A steep climb becomes an easy hill. A crash becomes a dangerous drop. A sideways period becomes a rhythm section. That gives the page more than generic finance copy: it gives players a reason to replay, compare tracks, and ask which chart should become the next level.
A stock chart game is a game where market chart movement becomes part of the gameplay.
Not necessarily. Some stock chart games are arcade-style, while others behave more like trading simulators.
It can help players notice volatility, trend, momentum, and timing, but it should not be treated as financial advice.
It can be similar if the chart becomes the playfield. This site is independent and is not affiliated with StonkRider.