Think Plants vs. Zombies but with chickens instead of plants. You're defending your base from waves of enemies by merging identical chickens into stronger warriors and positioning them across multiple lanes. It's simple to start, ridiculously addictive to master, and the merge mechanic gives you that "just one more upgrade" itch that keeps you clicking for way longer than you planned.
The basics take about 30 seconds to learn, but figuring out the optimal merge strategy takes real brainpower.
You start by spending coins to summon basic chickens. Drag two identical chickens together and they fuse into a higher-level warrior with a bigger rank badge. Keep merging to create elite units—I've seen chickens go from rank 3 to rank 5 and beyond. On desktop, you're clicking and dragging with your mouse. On mobile, it's all touch-based, and the hit zones are generous enough that you won't accidentally merge the wrong units.
Once you've got your upgraded chickens ready, drag them onto the 5-lane battlefield. Only chickens placed on defense positions will actually attack incoming enemies. I learned this the hard way—parking strong units off-grid does absolutely nothing. Enemies come from the right side in waves, and you need to balance your firepower across all lanes or they'll break through your weakest spot.
Hit the start button and watch your chickens auto-attack the zombie-crocodiles (yeah, that's what the enemies look like). Each kill drops coins. Between waves, spend those coins to train more units, merge them into stronger versions, or upgrade your barricades. The game pushes you into a risk-reward loop: do you save up for expensive merges, or spam cheap units to survive the next wave?
Perfect for casual players who want quick 5-minute sessions on the bus or during a break. The game doesn't demand lightning reflexes—it's more about planning and resource management. Kids will love the colorful chickens and simple drag-and-drop controls, while strategy fans will appreciate the merge optimization puzzle. If you enjoyed Bloons TD or any idle merge game, this hits the same dopamine buttons.
It's weirdly relaxing between waves, then mildly tense when enemies flood the screen. The art style is that thick-outlined, vector-based mobile look—bright colors, high contrast, nothing fancy. Think "polished flash game" rather than AAA console graphics. There's minimal background detail (just checkerboard grass tiles), which keeps the focus on the action. Audio isn't memorable, but it doesn't get annoying either. Overall, it's comfort food gaming—nothing groundbreaking, but scratches that merge-and-defend itch reliably.
The game auto-saves your progress to your browser cache, so you can close the tab and come back later without losing your upgraded chickens. Just don't clear your browsing data or you'll start from scratch. Performance-wise, this runs butter-smooth even on older hardware. The simple 2D sprites and minimal effects mean you won't have lag issues on a five-year-old phone or budget laptop. Loading times are basically instant.
A solid time-killer that respects your schedule but tempts you to "just do one more wave."
Responsive and intuitive. The drag-and-drop feels precise, and I never had accidental misclicks.
Developed by Beedo Games and released on December 15, 2025. It's a fresh take on the tower defense-merge hybrid genre that's been blowing up on mobile lately.