This is pure logic in its rawest form—no flashy graphics, no story, just you and a grid of colored dots that need to find their way home. It's like if someone stripped down a match-three game to its absolute skeleton and turned it into a routing puzzle. Your goal is simple: tap each colored dot to slide it along tracks until it lands in its matching colored ring. Sounds easy? Wait until dots start blocking each other and you need to plan five moves ahead.
Getting started takes ten seconds. Mastering the later levels? That'll take some serious spatial planning.
You tap a colored dot, and it slides along the gray track in one direction until it hits another dot or reaches an endpoint. That's your only control—no dragging, no aiming. The trick is figuring out which dot to move first, because once they're bunched up at an intersection, you've probably already lost.
Here's where it gets tricky: dots block each other. If you move a red dot into a yellow dot's path, that yellow dot is stuck. The game becomes a sliding block puzzle where you need to sequence your moves perfectly. I spent way too long on one level where three yellow dots were stacked vertically and I had to figure out how to separate them without trapping my red dots at the corner junction.
Every level is solved when each solid dot fills its matching hollow ring. Red dots go to red rings, yellow to yellow, and later on, green joins the party. Once everything clicks into place, you move to the next layout. No scoring, no stars—just that satisfying moment when the last dot slides home.
This is for the puzzle purists who loved games like Lyne or Hook. If you need explosions and rewards, skip it. But if you're the type who enjoys sitting with a cup of coffee and untangling a mental knot, this hits the spot. It's also perfect for short bursts—each level takes anywhere from 20 seconds to 5 minutes depending on how fast you see the solution. Safe for all ages, too, since there's literally nothing but colored circles on a white background.
It's zen until it isn't. The ultra-minimalist look—just flat colored circles and gray lines on a plain white screen—makes it feel like a digital whiteboard sketch. There's no music that I noticed, no sound effects to speak of. It's the kind of game you play while listening to a podcast or waiting for a meeting to start. The lack of "juice" (no screen shake, no particles, no celebration when you win) keeps it meditative, but I wish there was at least a subtle pop when a dot locks into its ring. Visually, it's about as bare-bones as it gets—think Google's material design test projects.
The game saves your progress automatically using browser storage, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off—just don't go clearing your cache. Performance-wise, this thing could probably run on a calculator. The graphics are so simple that I didn't notice a single frame drop even with multiple tabs open. If your device can load a webpage, it can handle this game.
A tight, focused puzzle game that respects your time and intelligence, but don't expect any bells or whistles.
Responsive and dead simple—though I did accidentally tap the wrong dot a few times when they were clustered together on mobile.
Color Dots Challenge was developed by hardiksavaliya037@gmail.com and released on August 28, 2025. It's clearly a solo dev project, which explains the minimalist approach and focus on pure mechanics over presentation.