The controls couldn't be simpler. You just tap a cube, and it hops onto a little platform that slides it into a waiting hole. But the holes are color-coded, and the cubes aren't always polite enough to arrive in order. You'll get a red cube, then two blues, then a green, then another red — and by then the red slot is already half full. You have to think fast, because if a slot overflows, it's game over. The difficulty ramps up gently, but it gets genuinely tense around level 20 or so. I found myself leaning forward in my chair, muttering "come on, come on" at my phone.
There's a nice rhythm to it. The cubes bounce and tumble with a satisfying physics feel, and the conveyor belt hums along at a steady pace. The colors are bright and clean — typical Voodoo polish. You get a few power-ups too, like a bomb that clears a whole row, or a freeze that stops the belt for a few seconds. They're not game-changing, but they help when things get hairy. And there's no timer, no star rating, no pressure beyond the belt itself. That's refreshing.
If you like quick, brain-tickling puzzles where you can zone out but still feel smart, Loop Sort is worth a download. It's free, it's fast, and it respects your time. Just don't blame me when you're still tapping cubes at 2 AM.