Endless Mode

How many can you get in a row? Play until you miss!

How Endless Mode Works

Endless Mode is Housle's unlimited play experience. Unlike the Daily Challenge, which gives every player the same set of homes once per day, Endless Mode lets you play as many rounds as you want with a fresh selection of properties each time. Your goal is to build the longest streak possible by correctly guessing whether each new home sold for a higher or lower price than the one before it.

Each round starts by showing you a home with its photo, location, number of bedrooms and bathrooms, and square footage. You'll see the sale price of the first home, then a second home appears with all the same details except the price. You decide: did this home sell for higher or lower? Guess correctly and your streak continues. One wrong answer and the game is over.

Choose Your Category

Housle offers multiple categories to customize your experience. Celebrity Homes features mansions and estates owned by famous actors, musicians, and athletes, with prices often reaching into the tens of millions. All Houses draws from our entire database of thousands of real properties spanning every price range and region. You can also filter by specific cities, states, or price ranges using the More Categories menu.

Different categories present different challenges. Celebrity homes tend to cluster at the high end, making the differences between prices more subtle. Mixed categories can swing wildly from a $150,000 starter home to a $5 million waterfront estate, which requires a different kind of intuition about real estate markets.

Tips for Guessing Home Prices

Location is Everything

The same home can cost ten times more depending on where it's located. A 2,000 square foot home in San Francisco or Manhattan will cost dramatically more than the same home in rural Texas or Ohio. Pay close attention to the city and state, and develop a mental map of expensive versus affordable markets. Coastal cities, tech hubs, and resort towns tend to command premium prices.

Square Footage Matters, But Not Equally

Larger homes generally cost more, but the price per square foot varies enormously by market. In Manhattan, you might pay $1,500 per square foot, while in the Midwest, homes can sell for under $100 per square foot. Use square footage as a relative indicator within similar markets rather than an absolute price predictor.

Bedrooms and Bathrooms Tell a Story

A home with 5 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms is likely a luxury property, while a 1-bed, 1-bath is probably a condo or starter home. But context matters: a 1-bedroom condo in Beverly Hills may cost more than a 5-bedroom home in a small town. The ratio of bathrooms to bedrooms can also signal luxury, as high-end homes often have more bathrooms than bedrooms.

Study the Photos

Property photos reveal details that numbers don't capture. Look for indicators of luxury like pool areas, waterfront views, professional landscaping, high-end finishes, and modern architecture. A recently renovated kitchen with marble countertops signals a higher price point than dated interiors. The exterior condition and curb appeal of a home can also be strong price indicators.

What Affects Home Values in America

Understanding the factors that drive home prices will make you a better Housle player and a more informed observer of real estate. The U.S. housing market is influenced by a complex mix of local, regional, and national factors. At the local level, school district quality, crime rates, proximity to employment centers, and neighborhood amenities all impact pricing. Regionally, job market strength, population growth trends, and climate preferences drive demand.

The physical characteristics of a home, including its age, condition, lot size, and architectural style, contribute to its value alongside location. Newer construction with modern amenities typically commands a premium, though historic homes in desirable neighborhoods can be equally valuable. Unique features like waterfront access, mountain views, or acreage add significant value depending on the market.

Playing Housle regularly trains your eye for these pricing signals. Over time, you'll develop an intuitive sense for what homes should cost in different markets, making each round faster and your streaks longer.

Ready to Start Your Streak?

Choose a category above and see how many you can get right in a row.

How Endless Mode Works

Housle Endless Mode is the core game experience where you test your knowledge of home prices across America. Each round presents you with a real house that actually sold, complete with photos, bedroom and bathroom counts, square footage, location, and property type. Your job is to guess whether the next house sold for a higher or lower price. Get it right and your streak grows. Get it wrong and the game ends.

Unlike the Daily Challenge, Endless Mode lets you play as many rounds as you want. There are no limits, no timers, and no daily resets. It is the perfect way to practice your pricing intuition, explore different property categories, and chase higher and higher streaks.

Choose Your Category

Endless Mode offers multiple categories to keep things interesting. Play with all houses for a random mix of properties from across the country, or narrow your focus to specific types. The Celebrity Homes category features mansions and estates owned by famous actors, musicians, athletes, and public figures, often with surprising price tags that challenge even experienced real estate enthusiasts.

Additional categories let you filter by property type, price range, or region. Whether you want to compare luxury penthouses in Manhattan to sprawling ranches in Texas, or test yourself exclusively on suburban family homes, there is a category that matches your interests. Switching categories also resets your streak, giving you a fresh start with a new set of homes.

Tips for Building Long Streaks

Study the Location

Location is the single biggest factor in home pricing. A modest home in San Francisco can cost more than a large estate in rural areas. Pay close attention to the city and state, and build a mental map of expensive versus affordable markets.

Read the Photos

Photos reveal details that raw numbers cannot. High-end finishes like marble countertops, custom cabinetry, professional landscaping, and designer fixtures all signal premium pricing. Dated interiors or deferred maintenance suggest the opposite.

Compare Square Footage

A 4,000 square foot home generally costs more than a 1,500 square foot home in the same market. But be careful: price per square foot varies dramatically by location. A 1,200 sqft condo in Manhattan can exceed a 3,000 sqft home elsewhere.

Watch for Outliers

Some properties defy expectations. Waterfront homes, historic properties, and celebrity-owned estates can command massive premiums. Similarly, a home in a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood may cost far more than its appearance suggests.

Why Players Love Endless Mode

Endless Mode is where most players spend their time on Housle. The open-ended format means there is always room to improve, and the variety of homes keeps every session fresh. Many players find that their streaks steadily increase as they develop stronger instincts for regional pricing differences, property features, and market dynamics.

The game draws from thousands of real listings across all 50 states, featuring everything from starter homes and condos to waterfront mansions and celebrity estates. Each house shown is a real property that actually sold, so the prices reflect genuine market conditions. Over time, regular players report a noticeably better understanding of what homes are worth across different American markets.

Ready for a Different Challenge?

Try the Daily Challenge where every player gets the same homes. Compare your score on the global leaderboard!

Play Daily Challenge