Free Online Fortune Spending Simulator

You just inherited ₹83,00,000 crore.
Spend it before it spends you.

That's roughly 1 trillion US dollars — sitting in your account, doing nothing. Rockets, islands, AI data centers, sports teams: buy until there's nothing left, then print the receipt to prove it.

Remaining balance

₹83,00,00,00,00,00,000

0% spent — you haven't bought a thing yet.

What is this game?

Spend the Fortune drops a virtual ₹83,00,000 crore — about 1 trillion US dollars — into your account and asks one question: what would you actually buy with it? Most of us can picture spending a few lakh or even a crore. A trillion dollars is a different scale entirely, and the only real way to feel it is to try spending it, line item by line item, until the number finally hits zero.

Click through rockets, islands, supercars, AI data centers and sports franchises. Watch the balance bar shrink. See how far a "trillion" actually stretches — and how fast it doesn't.

How to play

  1. Browse the categories — Space, Real Estate, Transport, Tech, Sports & Leisure, and Everyday Splurges.
  2. Click "Buy" on anything you like. Buy multiples of the same item using the + and − buttons.
  3. Watch your balance drop in the sticky bar at the bottom of the screen.
  4. Keep going until you've spent it all — or run out of patience.
  5. Open your receipt for an itemised summary, complete with a verdict on your spending style. Print it if you want a souvenir.

Frequently asked questions

What is Spend the Fortune?

It's a free browser game where you're handed a virtual ₹83,00,000 crore (about 1 trillion US dollars) and have to spend it all on things like rockets, private islands, supercars, sports teams and more. No real money is involved — it's a playful way to understand just how large a trillion-dollar fortune really is.

Is this game free to play?

Yes, completely. It works in any modern browser, with no account, download, or payment required.

How much is ₹83,00,000 crore in dollars?

₹83,00,000 crore works out to roughly 1 trillion US dollars, using an approximate rate of ₹83 to the dollar. A trillion is 1 followed by 12 zeros — a thousand times bigger than a billion.

Can I save or share my results?

Yes. Once you've finished shopping, open the receipt screen for an itemised, printable summary of everything you bought, complete with a closing verdict on your spending style. Print it or screenshot it to share.

Is this based on a real billionaire's net worth?

No. The starting balance is a round, fictional number chosen for fun, and isn't tied to any real person's actual net worth or financial data.

Why does the game use lakh and crore instead of million and billion?

The game is built for an Indian audience, so amounts are shown using the Indian numbering system — lakh (1,00,000) and crore (1,00,00,000) — alongside the more familiar trillion-dollar comparison for context.