💙 Gate Square #Gate Blue Challenge# 💙
Show your limitless creativity with Gate Blue!
📅 Event Period
August 11 – 20, 2025
🎯 How to Participate
1. Post your original creation (image / video / hand-drawn art / digital work, etc.) on Gate Square, incorporating Gate’s brand blue or the Gate logo.
2. Include the hashtag #Gate Blue Challenge# in your post title or content.
3. Add a short blessing or message for Gate in your content (e.g., “Wishing Gate Exchange continued success — may the blue shine forever!”).
4. Submissions must be original and comply with community guidelines. Plagiarism or re
Is luck important or is hard work important?
Someone said before that I was lucky to encounter so many opportunities in this circle, which is why I achieved the results.
But to be honest, every time I hear someone say "You're really lucky," I just smile and let it go.
Do you think luck is more important, or is hard work more important?
Then I would like to use "Sunrise over the Sea of Clouds" as an example.
Are those who can see the sunrise over the sea of clouds there because of luck or effort?
Mr. A went out traveling and wasn't prepared to watch the sunrise at all. As a result, he accidentally saw the sun rising from the horizon, surrounded by mist and clouds, beautiful like a dream. He thought, "Wow, what great luck."
Mr. B set his alarm clock early, checked the weather, and arrived at the seaside, but the weather was not good; the clouds were too thick, and he couldn't see anything. He might think, "Today I have bad luck."
Mr. C has been living by the sea for many years. He wakes up early every day to exercise and has grown accustomed to watching the sunrise, which no longer surprises him.
So, whose luck is the best?
You will find that most people have a misunderstanding of "luck."
If you have no goals, no preparation, and no plan for something, then if the result is good, you attribute it to luck; if the result is bad, you attribute it to bad luck.
But the truth is: the sun rises every day. It doesn't just appear on a whim one day; it has always been there. It's just a matter of whether you get up, and whether you see it at the right time and in the right place.
The cryptocurrency circle is the same.
Opportunities arise every day, and trends don't come out of nowhere; they can be traced back. When you see others getting rich out of nothing, you may think they are just lucky, but that's only seeing the "overflow" result. You don't see how much preparation they did while you were sleeping, how many projects they examined while you were having fun, and how they jumped in while you were still hesitating.
What truly determines whether you can see the "sunrise" is never luck, but whether you got up early.
Of course, some people are indeed very lucky; they stumble upon the trend as soon as they enter, and even without understanding anything, they can become rich quickly.
But you have to know, he only watched the sunrise once.
If you find the right direction, respect the laws, and continuously study and approach that "place where the sun rises," what you will see is countless dawns and seas of clouds.
So, whether it's luck or hard work, it is essentially just a way for humans to explain unknown outcomes.
But the world never looks at explanations; it only recognizes structure.
You can attribute chance to luck and blame failure on fate, but only those who understand the laws, respect them, and invest in them long-term deserve a certain future.