Company: FGMCU
Filing Date: 2025-10-27
Form Type: 425
Source: 0001104659-25-102245
Chunk: 0

Company: FG Merger II Corp.
Filing Date: 2025-10-27
Form: 425
Chunk 0
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Filed by FG Merger II Corp.

pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933

and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12

under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Subject Company: Boxabl Inc.

Commission File No. 000-56579

Date: October 24, 2025

As previously disclosed, on August 4, 2025, Boxabl Inc. (“Boxabl”)
entered into an Agreement and Plan of Merger (the “Merger Agreement”) by and among the Company, FG Merger II Corp., a Nevada
corporation (“FGMC”), and FG Merger Sub II Inc., a Nevada corporation and wholly-owned subsidiary of FGMC (“Merger Sub”).
The Merger Agreement provides for a two-step merger transaction (the “Mergers”) in which, first, Merger Sub will merge with
and into the Company (the “First Merger”), with the Company surviving as a wholly-owned subsidiary of FGMC, and, immediately
thereafter, the Company (as the surviving company in the First Merger) will merge with and into FGMC (the “Second Merger”),
with FGMC continuing as the surviving public company (the “Surviving Pubco”). By virtue of the consummation of the Mergers,
the Surviving Pubco will change its name to BOXABL Inc.

On October 24, 2025, The following article was published on Bloomberg.

Father-Son Builders Hope Trump Bump Pushes Wealth ‘to the Moon’

2025-10-24 14:00:46 GMT

By Dylan Sloan

(Bloomberg) -- Galiano Tiramani got his start running a Bitcoin exchange
and a marijuana farm that he concedes was “borderline illegal.”

Now, he and his father are poised to become billionaires on the heels
of a SPAC deal involving their modular-housing company, Boxabl Inc. His father Paolo donated $10 million toward Donald Trump’s White
House ballroom construction project last week. And they hope the president will take up their cause of replacing the current patchwork
of state modular housing regulations with one-stop federal oversight, which could make them even richer.

“It could be totally nuts,” Tiramani, 38, said in an interview.
“If they pass a program where I can go and apply for my house to be approved in the whole country, that would blow up the whole
business — like, to