The board starts empty, then you get a stream of block shapes in different colors. Your job is to place them so they fill rows or columns completely—classic block puzzle logic. But here’s the twist: the colors matter. You can’t just jam any block anywhere. Matching colors clears them faster, and mismatching just piles up. The wooden board texture gives it a satisfying tactile feel, even on a phone screen. I found myself rotating pieces and planning three moves ahead, not because I had to, but because it felt good to solve the puzzle cleanly.
What surprised me most is how the difficulty ramps up without ever feeling unfair. Early levels are almost meditative—you can zone out and still win. Later ones force you to think about color placement and board space at the same time. There’s no penalty for taking your time, which means you can actually breathe between moves. The game doesn’t punish you for thinking. It just waits.
A few things I noticed after playing for a while:
If you’re the type who likes Sudoku or Tetris but hates the pressure, this is your game. One tip: don’t rush to fill every gap. Sometimes leaving a small hole is smarter than forcing a block that doesn’t match the color. Let the board breathe, and the solution usually shows up.