Frequently asked questions
Updated · By the SpendElonMoney team
Everything players ask about SpendElonMoney — the free browser game where you get one trillion dollars and one timer — answered in one place. New to the game? Start with how to play, then steal a run plan from tips & strategies.
Frequently asked questions
What is SpendElonMoney?
SpendElonMoney is a free browser game that parodies Amazon. You get Elon Musk's $1 trillion fortune and one timer — 30 seconds to 5 minutes — to spend as much of it as you can across 65 satirical listings, then check out before the clock hits zero.
How do you play?
Pick a time limit, hit Buy Now, and load the cart with anything from a $2 Coca-Cola to the entire NBA. Place your order before time runs out and you get a downloadable, shareable bill. Miss the deadline and the whole trillion burns.
Is any real money involved?
No. Nothing here is for sale, no payment is ever taken, and none of the listings are real offers. The game is free to play, works in any modern browser, and needs no sign-up or account.
Is Elon Musk really a trillionaire?
In the game's lore, yes: it imagines his net worth crossing $1,000,000,000,000 after a SpaceX IPO, making him the world's first trillionaire. Treat the number as satire — real-world net worth estimates move every day.
Can I share my results?
Yes. Winning a round produces a receipt you can download as a PNG image or share to X, Reddit, Facebook, and WhatsApp. Losing produces a red 'NEVER PLACED' fail card that is every bit as shareable, if considerably less flattering.
Is this site affiliated with Amazon or Elon Musk?
No. SpendElonMoney is an independent parody game. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Amazon, Elon Musk, Tesla, SpaceX, or anyone with actual money.
Do I need to create an account or download anything?
No. SpendElonMoney runs entirely in the browser — no download, no sign-up, no email. Open the site, pick a timer, play.
Does the game work on mobile?
Yes. The store, timer, and checkout are all built for phones, including a fixed checkout bar so the Place Your Order button is always reachable.
Are the products in the store real?
The listings are satirical, but most prices are anchored to reality: a Falcon 9 launch really is quoted around $67 million, the ISS really did cost about $150 billion, and NBA franchise valuations really do add up to roughly the game's price tag.
What is the hardest difficulty?
The 30-second timer, unofficially known as psycho mode. Quantities are click-only — there's no typing a big number — so spending meaningful money that fast means a disciplined burst of plus-button taps on ten-figure items. See our tips and strategies guide.
Can I share my results?
Yes. Winning produces a printable thermal-style bill you can download as a PNG; losing produces a NEVER PLACED fail card. Both share directly to X, Reddit, Facebook, and WhatsApp.
Is SpendElonMoney affiliated with Amazon or Elon Musk?
No. It's an independent parody. The store design spoofs Amazon's, and the wallet spoofs Elon Musk's rumored future net worth, but there is no affiliation with Amazon, Elon Musk, Tesla, or SpaceX.
Where do the money facts in the guides come from?
Net-worth figures reference public estimates from trackers like the Forbes Real-Time Billionaires list and the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. These numbers move daily, so our guides quote ranges and dates rather than false precision.