FAQ
Frequently asked questions
How TowerLoop works, what the Windows license includes, which emulator setup pieces matter, and the rules responsibility that stays with each player.
TowerLoop is a local Windows desktop automation utility. It runs on your PC and sends user-configured input (taps and clicks) to an Android emulator or device that you control, so repetitive idle-game sessions can run without you sitting at the keyboard.
No. TowerLoop is independent software by Lemma 151 LLC. It is not affiliated with Tech Tree Games or the creators of The Tower - Idle Tower Defense. Third-party names are used only to identify compatibility.
No. TowerLoop does not modify the game client, inject code, patch files, read protected memory, alter network traffic, or interact directly with game servers. It performs local input automation in the environment you configure.
Tech Tree Games' EULA for The Tower restricts external software used for unfair advantage and names autoclickers specifically. External automation can carry account risk, so review the current game rules before you use any tool.
No. TowerLoop does not sell, generate, duplicate, transfer, or manipulate in-game currency, items, accounts, or paid entitlements. In online games like The Tower, balances are stored server-side, so third-party currency-creation claims are not a TowerLoop capability.
No. TowerLoop does not require your game account password, and you should not provide game credentials to TowerLoop.
A Windows 10 or 11 PC, plus an Android emulator (such as BlueStacks, LDPlayer, or MuMu Player) or a connected Android device that you control. TowerLoop communicates with the emulator or device using ADB, Android's standard debugging interface.
ADB (Android Debug Bridge) is Google's official command-line tool, shipped in the Android SDK Platform Tools. TowerLoop uses it to communicate with an emulator or Android device you control. On a normal consumer device, ADB does not grant root access by itself.
TowerLoop works with Android emulators and devices that you control and that expose an ADB connection. Popular Windows emulators include BlueStacks, LDPlayer, and MuMu Player. You remain responsible for configuring your own device or emulator environment.
Yes. You are responsible for the rules that apply to your game, account, device, emulator, platform, and software environment.
Payments, invoices, subscriptions, and billing management are handled through Paddle. Your subscription provides access to the TowerLoop desktop software, license validation, updates, and support for the selected billing period.
Refund eligibility is described on our refund policy page. If you have a question about a specific charge, contact support and we will help.