
Loading critic reviews...
Finding live streams...
Click Me Harder is a clicker simulator with anime flair. Developed by Tegridy Made Games, it launched in 2025 for PC. The premise is straightforward: click a waifu to earn cash, upgrade your clicking power, and automate income with idle helpers. The single-player loop focuses on exponential growth through upgrades, while the multiplayer mode lets you sabotage rivals by clicking their avatars. It’s a low-effort, high-reward game wrapped in brightly colored anime aesthetics. Ideal for killing time between tasks, but its niche humor and repetitive mechanics may not appeal to everyone.
You start by clicking a single anime girl, each tap generating cash. Early upgrades let you boost your click value or unlock automated assistants, which steadily earn money while you’re away. Later, you’ll manage a roster of waifus, each with unique idle bonuses. Multiplayer adds a chaotic layer: you can spend in-game currency to click others’ avatars, slowing their progress. Controls are minimal, left-clicking dominates, but later upgrades introduce resource management, like balancing energy bars for assistants. Sessions often blend bursts of aggressive clicking with idle progression, making it easy to play in short bursts or leave running overnight.
Community ratings are mixed but trending positive. 84% of players rate it as “Enjoyable,” with 16% calling it “Waste of Time.” Average playtime is 22 hours, though 37% of players complete the main campaign in under 8 hours. The game has 37 achievements, with 23% completion rate overall. Player moods split between “Addictive” (42%) and “Cheesy” (28%). One review notes, “It’s exactly what I expected, mindless but satisfying.” Critics praise the rapid progression but question longevity. Price at launch was $9.99, with 68% of buyers feeling it’s fair for the content.
Click Me Harder is a guilty pleasure with solid execution. It appeals to fans of idle games and anime memes, offering instant gratification without depth. The multiplayer mode adds minor social spice but doesn’t elevate the core loop. At its current price, it’s a low-risk purchase for casual players. Achievements are plentiful but easy, making it completionist-friendly. Skip if you crave meaningful systems or story. For 2025’s indie scene, it’s a forgettable entry, but a fun way to spam your mouse during a slow workday.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer
Finding deals...
Loading achievements...
Finding similar games...
Checking Bluesky...