Bloodmoney Remake delivers a chilling blend of horror, clicker and strategy where greed consumes the soul and every choice defines your destiny.
Bloodmoney Remake resurrects the unsettling legacy of the original BLOODMONEY! in a grim, reimagined form. Set in a decaying world ruled by greed and guilt, the game invites players to descend into a haunting cycle of profit and despair. Every click, every choice, and every hesitation pushes you deeper into a world where money stains the soul.
GAMEPLAY OVERVIEW
At first glance, the clicker gameplay of Bloodmoney Remake seems deceptively simple. Interact with Harvey to earn your first drops of wealth, then upgrade to expand your profits. Yet, with every click, both fortune and corruption grow hand in hand.
The upgrade system enhances your earnings but twists the visuals and mood, turning each purchase into a moral sacrifice. As your wealth rises, Harvey’s form distorts, serving as a grim reflection of your decisions. Three unique endings: Good, Bad, or Normal await depending on your balance of greed and restraint. Each playthrough reveals new fragments of the story, ensuring no two journeys feel the same.
How to Play
- Use your mouse clicks to interact, earn, and progress through this eerie descent.
Upgrades unlock faster income and new features, yet the cost runs deeper than numbers on the screen. Every choice shifts the atmosphere, tests your conscience, and leads you toward one of several possible fates. Whether you seek redemption or ruin, your actions alone determine the ending.
A Moral Descent into Madness
Beneath its clicker surface lies a psychological horror that challenges more than reflexes, it tests morality itself. Every upgrade and hesitation chips away at your sense of right and wrong. As Harvey mutates, the game forces you to confront your own greed and its consequences.
Not for the Faint of Heart
This is horror in its purest psychological form. Bloodmoney Remake invites you to stare into your own moral abyss and decide what your soul is worth. Each click echoes a question, how much will you sacrifice for profit?































