Candy Crush Saga Hack Extension For Chrome

The extension waits for you to log into Facebook (which you use to save your Candy Crush progress). It then copies your Facebook session cookie and sends it to a hacker in Vietnam. They now have access to your social media account.

The extension hides itself and clicks on invisible pop-up ads in the background. This generates revenue for the hacker without you ever seeing a single ad.

If you hate ads, do not install an ad blocker extension (which can also be malicious). Instead, change your computer’s DNS to dns.adguard.com. This blocks ads at the network level, making Candy Crush cleaner without a risky extension.

The most sophisticated extensions would use computer vision or DOM parsing to analyze the candy grid and automatically make the optimal match every turn. This is less of a "hack" and more of an AI-assisted bot. candy crush saga hack extension for chrome

Let’s get technical. Candy Crush Saga is built using HTML5/JavaScript in the browser, wrapped in a custom framework. Chrome extensions have the ability to:

In theory, yes—a skilled developer could create an extension that modifies the local game state. In fact, early versions of Candy Crush on Facebook (circa 2013–2015) were notoriously easy to hack with simple bookmarklets or userscripts.

However, King Digital Entertainment has since implemented multiple layers of anti-cheat: The extension waits for you to log into

Conclusion: A Chrome extension that provides unlimited gold or server-side level completion does not exist because those values are not stored in your browser. They are on King’s servers. Extensions that claim otherwise are lying.

On the browser version, you can manually change your computer’s system clock forward by 30 minutes to regain a life. Close the game tab, change the clock, reopen. King has partially patched this, but sometimes it works on older browser builds. Note: This will not give you gold or moves.

Some extensions simply hide the HTML elements containing ads and the wait timer. They make you think you have no lives, but they hide the timer overlay. Legally gray, but technically not a hack. In theory, yes—a skilled developer could create an

The Verdict: Real "hacks" that give you infinite gold bars do not exist on the Chrome Web Store. If a developer had cracked King’s server encryption, they would sell that exploit for millions of dollars, not give it away for free in a browser extension.


Before discussing the hack, we must understand the motivation. Candy Crush Saga is a "freemium" game. You can play for free, but progress is throttled by:

The Chrome browser version (playable via the official website or Facebook Gaming) is identical to the mobile version in terms of logic. However, because it runs inside a desktop browser, it is theoretically more vulnerable to manipulation than a sandboxed iOS or Android app. This is why many players search specifically for a Chrome extension—an add-on that integrates directly into the browser and can intercept, modify, or automate the game's behavior.