Ever walked into a room and thought, "I really need to clean this mess up"? Now imagine doing it without the actual effort. Apartment Cleanup! is a super chill sorting game where you drag matching objects together to make them vanish. Think of it like a zen version of those hidden object games, but instead of searching, you're matching pairs until the chaos is gone. It's pure casual vibes—no timers, no pressure, just you versus a messy pile of household junk.
It's super straightforward, but spotting the right matches can be tricky when things pile up.
You start staring at a heap of furniture, pots, pillows, and random household items scattered everywhere. Your job is to find identical objects—two grey pots, two wooden stools, two pink pillows. Once you spot a pair, you're ready to clear them.
Tap and drag one object directly onto its matching twin. When they collide, they disappear in a little burst of pink particles. The trick is sometimes objects are buried under other stuff, so you need to clear the top layers first to reach what's hidden underneath.
Keep matching and clearing until the floor is completely empty. Once every object is gone, the level's done and you move on to the next messy room. The difficulty ramps up slowly—more objects, more variety, more visual clutter to sort through.
Perfect for casual players who want something brainless to unwind with. If you're the type who likes organizing drawers or playing those "satisfying" sorting videos on repeat, this is your jam. It's super accessible for non-gamers too—my mom would probably get hooked on this. Each level takes maybe 1-3 minutes, so it's ideal for killing time during a coffee break or waiting in line.
It's incredibly low-key. No music blasting, no flashy effects—just you, the clutter, and the mild dopamine hit when objects merge and pop. Visually, it's basic. The 3D models look like they came from a starter pack—low-poly furniture with flat lighting and simple textures. Honestly, it's not trying to impress you with graphics, and that's fine for this genre. The whole experience is meditative, almost like digital bubble wrap. You zone out, tap some stuff, and feel weirdly productive without actually cleaning your real apartment.
The game saves your progress automatically in your browser's local storage, so you can pick up where you left off. Just don't clear your cache if you're mid-session. Performance-wise, this thing will run on a potato. The graphics are so simple that even older phones or budget laptops won't break a sweat. No lag, no stuttering—just smooth dragging and tapping.
A solid time-waster for when your brain needs a break, but don't expect anything groundbreaking.
The controls are as simple as they get and respond instantly—no frustrating delays or wonky physics.
Developed by Pavel Divnenko and released on October 20, 2025, it's a fresh entry in the hyper-casual cleanup genre.