Merge Infinity
About Merge Infinity
Merge Infinity drops you onto a bright 5×7 grid packed with numbers that follow a simple rule: every value is part of a geometric progression, doubling each step - 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, all the way to the heavy hitters like 256 and beyond. Each number has its own color, so the board feels like a calm mosaic waiting to be rearranged by your next chain.
Where the Score Comes From

The heart of the game is linking. Any two identical numbers touching each other (side by side, up or down, or even in a zigzag) can be combined. A pair is enough, but a whole cluster is where the real points come in. Every number you include adds to your total score, and the final tile becomes the upgraded value.
Small Chains, Big Consequences
A merge in this game is never just a quick tap. The number you create stays on the board, and that one tile can help you or get in your way later. Sometimes clearing a patch of tiny numbers feels smart, but other times holding off gives you enough space to build a long, satisfying chain. That quiet balance (risking a short win to chase a bigger one) is where the real fun hides.
The Grid Keeps Changing Under You
One move is enough to make the whole board feel different. A cluster opens up, a path disappears, a new idea appears out of nowhere. Because you can connect tiles in crooked paths or odd angles, you keep scanning for shapes you didn’t notice before. Half the game is spotting those strange little routes that only make sense once you see them.
When Your Eyes Miss Something
There are moments when you stare at the board, and everything blends. The hint button is there for that. It doesn’t solve the puzzle; it just taps you on the shoulder and shows one possible chain. Most of the time, that tiny nudge is enough to remind you what you were trying to do in the first place.
Chasing the Highest Number
The best part of Merge Infinity is the slow climb. Every merge is a step toward a bigger tile, and every bigger tile changes what’s possible on the next move. You’re always edging toward that one number you’ve never created before. When it finally appears (after a long, messy chain), it feels like a small personal victory, the kind that keeps you playing just one more round.
























































