Make It Rain: The Love of Money – How to earn massive amounts of money

Make It Rain: The Love of Money is a game where your goal is to earn money by… earning money. Essentially, that’s the gist of it, but at the same time there are a number of strategies that you can use in order to increase the money you earn in the game. Read on to find out how to get more money in Make It Rain: The Love of Money!

-Before you do anything else, do ALL of the free offers in the “lightning bolt” menu, aside from inviting two Facebook friends, and make sure to set the posts that the game makes for you to be visible to “Only Me”. Doing these offers will literally multiply the speed at which you earn cash at any given point.
-Swipe with two hands, preferrably with the phone upside down so that you can swipe at maximum speed without sliding the phone around.

-Purchase the business investments first, to multiply the amount of money per swipe. Then use the money from that to finance the purchase of political investments and financial investments.
-Set your phone so that it doesn’t automatically sleep when you leave it alone, so that you can continue to earn money indefinitely from your financial investments if you put the phone down.

-When an ad pops up, let it stay up so that the FBI doesn’t investigate you. Or, open a store tab before you set the phone down, and the FBI popup won’t appear.
-Purchase the financial investments that will give you the biggest return on investments. To figure this out, calculate the money per second earned relative to the price.

-Buy the political stuff to earn money while you are disconnected from the game. This might not seem like much money but it’s important.
-Fill the bucket right away by setting the time forward in your phone’s date and time settings. Then go back to the game and collect the money. Rinse and repeat as often as you’d like.

-Keep the game updated, because new purchases appear in the store whenever they update the game. This includes purchases that are more expensive and lucrative than the pre-existing ones, purchases that slide somewhere in between already-existing investments, and jokes and pop-culture references, too.