
by Orteil
Cookie Clicker is a game about making an absurd amount of cookies. To help you in this endeavor, you will recruit a wide variety of helpful cookie makers, like friendly Grandmas, Farms, Factories, and otherworldly Portals. Cookie Clicker was originally released in 2013, but has been very actively developed since then. If you played it before, try it again to see all the new features! Collect cookies and spend them to earn even more cookies Over 600+ upgrades Over 500+ Achievements Pet your dragon Mini-games Unlock heavenly perma-upgrades Cloud saving (no more deleting cookies by accident) Music by C418 Play community-made mods through Steam workshop
A.Play Cookie Clicker unblocked by using the official web version (cookieclicker.com) or an approved partner site like Coolmath Games, or install the official Steam/mobile releases; if a network blocks the site, ask your IT/admin for an exception rather than trying to bypass filters.
A.No — there is no official “Cookie Clicker 2.” The original Cookie Clicker (continually updated by Julien “Orteil”/DashNet) is still the live title and has been ported to Steam and consoles; third‑party clones and browser extensions using the name “Cookie Clicker 2” exist but are not official.
A.Yes — Cookie Clicker can be cheated using the browser console/Open Sesame debug menu, save editing, bookmarklets, mods, or external auto‑clickers, but these actions can trigger the in‑game “Cheated cookies taste awful” flag and may disable Steam achievements; back up your save first.
A.Yes — Cookie Clicker supports mods. The Steam version has built‑in Steam Workshop support and the game (both Steam and browser) accepts JavaScript add‑ons you can install locally or via mod managers, but take care to back up saves and check compatibility.
A.Yes — the community-maintained Cookie Clicker Wiki at cookieclicker.wiki.gg is the best single reference, with a comprehensive set of pages covering mechanics, upgrades, minigames, add-ons and strategies; the older Fandom wiki still exists as an alternate resource.
A.Yes — there are several solid general guides: the official site for basics, a comprehensive community-run wiki for mechanics, and many player-written guides (Steam, GameFAQs, specialist articles) for strategy and ascension tips.
A.Append the keyword saysopensesame to your bakery name (e.g., "MyBakery saysopensesame") to enable Cookie Clicker’s hidden developer (OpenSesame) panel in the web build; on Steam use the console command Game.OpenSesame(). Always export your save first because this flags your run as “cheated” and can affect achievements.
A.The Garden is Cookie Clicker’s farm minigame where you plant and harvest seeds on a grid that grows with Farm level, gaining passive bonuses and harvest effects. It uses soils, ticks, and cross-breeding to unlock new seeds, and it interacts with ascension via seeds kept but crops reset.
A.Yes — you can play Cookie Clicker on Cool Math Games in your browser. It’s the browser-hosted version of the game, including an unblocked option noted by the official site.
A.Unlock and optimize the Garden early, expand to a 6x6 plot, and use cross-breeding and soil choices to maximize CPS and golden-cookie potential. Sacrifice the garden only after you’ve unlocked all 34 seeds to gain sugar lumps for late-game power.
A.Ascend when you can turn a reset into a meaningful long-term boost: start with a few hundred Heavenly Chips for your first ascent, then escalate as you gain more chips and bigger upgrades.
A.Yes—there are save editors for Cookie Clicker, including online browser tools; use caution when mixing browser and Steam saves.
A.There are 622 normal achievements and 17 shadow achievements (639 total) in Cookie Clicker, not counting Dungeon-related milestones. The complete, up-to-date roster is tracked on the official Cookie Clicker Wiki, which lists all non-dungeon achievements and their requirements.
A.You can play the official Cookie Clicker online in your browser via the in-browser web version, with an official Steam edition available for PC/Mac as well. The publisher’s site confirms Web as an official platform, and the live web version is maintained by Orteil and DashNet.




