Blood Money takes the familiar incremental-clicker formula and drenches it in dark comedy and creeping unease. Tapping builds your income like any clicker game, and you spend that income on upgrades — but here, the upgrades themselves are unsettling, and many choices branch into events that reshape the run in unpredictable ways. Risk-heavy options tempt you with bigger payouts in exchange for consequences that stack up quickly, nudging each playthrough toward stranger builds and weirder endings. The dark humor keeps things from feeling purely grim, but the game never lets you forget that every bit of progress has some kind of cost attached, even when that cost isn't obvious until much later.
Use the mouse to click and generate income, then spend it through the upgrade menu to boost your earning rate or unlock new modifiers. Many upgrades and events present a choice rather than a simple purchase — a lucrative option might carry a hidden downside, while a safer choice yields slower but steadier progress. Pay attention to how earlier choices affect later events, since Blood Money often connects consequences across the run rather than resetting the slate with each new upgrade. The general goal is to build the highest income or reach the most interesting outcome, but with no single "correct" path, part of the fun is discovering what different combinations of choices lead to.
Blood Money stands out from typical incremental games by making every choice feel like it matters, rather than just being another number to increase. If you enjoy the clicker foundation but want the classic, lighter version, Cookie Clicker offers the genre's most iconic take, while Capybara Clicker provides a much cozier alternative. If the branching, consequence-driven structure appeals to you, A Dark Room offers a similarly narrative-tinged incremental experience. It plays entirely in the browser with no download needed. Discover more clicker and incremental games in the full games library on Machita 66.