To understand if a script works, you must understand how Adopt Me! is built.
The Roblox Client-Server Model Roblox operates on a strict authority system:
Why "Infinite Money" Logic Fails A script is a piece of code (usually Lua) that runs on your client to automate actions. A genuine "infinite money" script would need to do one of two things:
The Verdict: No public, free script called "Adopt Me Infinite Money Script" actually works. If it did, the developers at Uplift Games (Adopt Me! creators) would patch it within 24 hours, and the script would be worthless.
Log in every day. On Day 30, you receive a Star Reward that often grants 1,000+ Bucks and a rare pet. This is guaranteed, legal, and takes 2 minutes per day.
This is the most common result for "infinite money script."
You download a .exe file or a "script hub" that requires you to input your Roblox username and password to "enable infinite cash."
What happens: The script sends your login details to a remote server. Within minutes, your account is stripped of its rare pets, your Robux is spent on gift cards, and your password is changed.
The video says "Check link in description." The link goes to Linkvertise or a similar ad platform. You complete a "verification" captcha, download a "VPN," or install a browser extension. After 10 minutes of ads, you receive a text file that says: "Sorry, script patched. Wait for update."
Conclusion: These scripts either do nothing, steal your data, or simply automate grinding (which is slow, not infinite).