Scratch tickets
Buy tickets, reveal symbols, and chase bigger payouts.

Browser play
Scratch cards, buy upgrades, automate the run, and chase jackpots.
What you do after pressing play
Buy tickets, reveal symbols, and chase bigger payouts.
Use early winnings to buy stronger tickets and upgrades.
Unlock gadgets that turn manual scratching into systems.
Reset for Jack Points and push the next run further.
Scratch tickets, unlock gadgets, chase jackpots, and earn Jack Points. Here is the first route in five minutes.
Wash dishes to earn your first cash before buying tickets.
›Start small, learn the odds, then scratch by hand.
›Scratch Bot, Fan, and more start turning effort into systems.
›Improve payouts, odds, scratch speed, and repeatability.
›Reset, earn permanent power, and build stronger runs.
Use these guides when the first few tickets raise bigger questions about gadgets, risk, prestige, and achievement routes.
A clean first-run route for the opening minutes.
Scratch Bot, Fan, Mundo, Spellbook, and more.
Safe picks, jackpot chasers, and risky scratchers.
When to reset and which upgrades to buy first.
Endgame systems, corporation path, and spoilers.
All 34 achievements and how to plan the route.
Scritchy Scratchy is an incremental scratch-card game about tickets, odds, jackpots, gadgets, and prestige. The page starts with the playable browser version, then explains the systems players ask about after their first few runs.
Play first, then use this overview to understand tickets, gadgets, automation, prestige, and Jack Points.
Scritchy Scratchy uses scratch-card tension as an incremental game loop, not real-money gambling. Start a browser session, reveal ticket symbols, collect payouts, and decide whether the next dollar should go into another ticket, a safer upgrade, or the first step toward automation.
The reliable beginner loop is simple: earn early cash, buy affordable tickets, scratch them, then reinvest winnings into stronger progression. Safer tickets help stabilize a run, while volatile tickets can drain money quickly if you chase them too early. Upgrades matter because they make each repeat cycle faster and less fragile.
Automation is what turns repeated scratching into a managed system. Scratch Bot and later gadgets help reduce manual work, but they still need a stable route behind them. The best early approach is to understand what each gadget fixes before letting automation spend money for you.
Prestige gives the game its long arc. Instead of treating every run as isolated, you eventually reset for Jack Points and use that permanent progress to make later attempts stronger. A good reset should make the next run cleaner, not just end the current one.
After the first few tickets, the useful questions change: which ticket path is safest, when a risky card is worth trying, which gadget removes the biggest bottleneck, and whether it is time to prestige. Use the guide links below when you want deeper help with gadgets, Jack Points, controls, or achievements.
The game works because the scratch-card action is immediate, while the incremental systems give players reasons to keep optimizing.
The appeal is the reveal: buy a ticket, scratch across the card, watch symbols appear, and decide whether the next ticket is worth the risk. The site keeps that framed as game progression, not real-money play.
A run can be played in small bursts. Early play is manual, but the longer loop adds upgrades and gadgets so returning players have systems to tune instead of only repeating clicks.
The useful questions are strategic: when to keep a cash reserve, when to upgrade consistency, when automation is safe, and when prestige is better than stretching a slow run.
Tickets, gadgets, Jack Points, and achievements give players clear next goals. That makes Scritchy Scratchy work as an incremental game instead of a single scratch-card novelty.
The run changes over time: first you scratch manually, then you stabilize tickets, automate repeat work, and plan prestige resets.
Use the starting income loop to fund affordable tickets. The goal is not to chase the biggest jackpot immediately; it is to learn the scratch flow, payout rhythm, and how quickly a risky ticket can drain cash.
Once tickets are repeatable, prioritize improvements that make the next few purchases easier to sustain. This is where players begin to compare safer cards against higher-volatility options.
Gadgets turn repeated manual actions into managed systems. Scratch Bot is the obvious automation anchor, while other tools are better understood by the bottleneck they solve: speed, stability, claims, or routing.
Prestige turns a slow run into future power through Jack Points. A good reset is not just about reaching a button; it is about deciding whether the next run will be cleaner and faster.
Practical advice for the first serious run, especially if you keep running out of cash or prestige too early.
Avoid spending the last bit of cash on a volatile ticket. A reserve lets you recover from bad outcomes without falling back into slow rebuilding.
Learning one reliable ticket path is easier than buying every new option immediately. Expand once the run has enough stability to absorb experiments.
Automation is powerful, but some tickets or penalties can be dangerous if the run is not prepared. Treat gadgets as control tools, not just speed buttons.
If the next meaningful upgrade takes too long, Jack Points may be worth more than extending the current run. Early resets should be deliberate, not automatic.
Use these systems as the map for deeper guides: tickets for risk, gadgets for automation, Jack Points for permanent progress, and achievements for route planning.
Different ticket types create different risk profiles. A useful guide should explain safe, medium-risk, high-risk, and spoiler-heavy choices separately.
Automation tools reduce friction as the run grows. The best guide angle is what bottleneck each gadget solves and when it becomes worth using.
Jack Points are the long-term reward for resetting. They make future runs stronger and turn repeated attempts into compounding progression.
Achievement planning belongs in spoiler-aware sections because cleanup routes can conflict with a normal progression run.
Short answers for common player questions before and after the first run.
It is an incremental scratch-card game where each run turns small ticket wins into upgrades, gadgets, automation, and prestige progress.
Start by earning money, buy tickets, scratch them, reinvest winnings into better odds and faster systems, then reset later for Jack Points.
Gadgets are progression tools that help automate or improve scratching. They are the bridge between manual tickets and idle-style growth.
Jack Points are prestige currency. Resetting at the right time can make later runs faster and more efficient.
No. Scritchy Scratchy uses scratch-card themes, odds, jackpots, and payouts as game mechanics, not real-money gambling.
Focus on stable early income, learn which tickets are worth repeating, then unlock automation before chasing risky jackpots.
Prioritize upgrades that make repeated tickets more reliable before chasing expensive cards. If you are unsure, choose the option that keeps the next few tickets easier to fund.
Prestige when the current run has slowed enough that permanent Jack Point progress is more valuable than grinding one more upgrade. Do not reset just because the option appears.
Browser progress normally depends on the embedded game build and the same browser storage. Do not clear site data if you want to preserve a local browser run.
Ticket odds, gadget interactions, and endgame routes can change. Use exact numbers only after checking the version you are playing.
Community
Scritchy Scratchy comments
Share practical tips, loading notes, or route advice after playing the browser demo.