
Stimulation Clicker
Game Details
Genre
Action
Format
HTML5 / WebGL
Controls
Mouse / Keyboard
Platform
Browser
About This Game
Stimulation Clicker plunges you headlong into a glorious avalanche of internet chaos, a slick parody of that click-happy, dopamine-seeking corner of your life where every notification screams for attention. You start with one innocent button demanding a click and end up wrestling with true-crime podcasts, ASMR slime, bouncing DVD logos, mukbang videos, and enough visual and audio clutter to short-circuit your senses. It’s like being trapped in a browser tab during peak Black Friday hysteria, and you’ll find yourself both horrified and utterly hooked.
How to Play Stimulation Clicker?
You begin in serene simplicity, clicking a lone “Click Me” button to earn a single Stimulation Point per tap. Soon enough, you’re spending your hard-won points on upgrades that automate point gains or boost your clicking power. These upgrades, like true-crime podcasts, slime videos, lo-fi beats, ASMR, and bouncing DVD logos, don’t just help you rack up points, they flood your screen and ears with chaos, satirizing our relentless crave for digital stimulation. Eventually, after buying every upgrade, you unlock the end credits sequence set at a peaceful ocean shore, a strangely calming finale after the digital whirlwind.
What Are the Controls for Stimulation Clicker?
- Left-click (or tap, if using a touchscreen) the large “Click Me” button to earn stimulation points
- Left-click / tap on upgrades in the menu to spend points and unlock new features
- Scroll (PC) or swipe (mobile) to browse the upgrade list
Features
- Escalates from a peaceful click-to-earn start into an overwhelming sensory storm
- Upgrades include absurd, satirical staples like a mermaid true-crime podcast, ASMR slime, mukbang videos, DVDs bouncing across the screen, lo-fi beats
- No save functionality, every playthrough starts fresh
- A surreal, peaceful ending on a serene ocean scene after unlocking every upgrade
- Works entirely in your browser, no installation required
- Serves as both an idle clicker and a sharp commentary on our overstimulated digital lives



























































