Ever lose your keys in a cluttered room? That's basically this game, but with bananas, spatulas, and random objects scattered across colorful scenes. Find Out Hidden Object is a classic seek-and-find puzzle where you tap items from a list to clear each level. It's simple, straightforward, and perfect for killing a few minutes—but don't expect anything groundbreaking here.
Getting started is dead simple—if you can tap, you can play.
You get a tray at the bottom showing silhouettes or icons of the objects you need to find. Look at the scene carefully—some items blend into the background or hide in plain sight. Use the zoom feature to inspect crowded areas, because trust me, that tiny spoon is somewhere in there.
When you spot a target item, just tap it. The counter updates (like "2/3 bananas found") and the item disappears from your list. Some levels ask you to find multiple copies of the same thing, so you're hunting for three forks or five apples scattered around.
Once you've collected everything on the list, the level ends and you unlock the next scene. There's no timer pressure here—take your time, zoom around, and find everything at your own pace. Finish enough scenes and new maps open up with fresh environments to search through.
This is peak casual territory. Perfect for young kids (4-8 years old) or anyone who wants a low-stress brain teaser without reflexes or strategy. If you're the type who played those "I Spy" books as a kid, this is the digital version. Also great for older folks looking for gentle cognitive exercise. Hardcore gamers? You'll be bored in three minutes. This isn't a challenge—it's a vibe.
It's super chill and meditative. No timer ticking down, no enemies attacking, no pressure. You just... look for stuff. The art style is all over the place though—some scenes look hand-drawn and simple, while others have this weird AI-generated feel with wonky proportions and objects that don't quite make sense (I swear I saw a banana that looked more like a boomerang). The UI is bare-bones white bars that clash with the colorful scenes, which makes it feel a bit cheap and thrown together. There's no music to speak of in my session, just silence and the occasional tap sound. Great for playing while listening to a podcast or zoning out.
The game saves your progress automatically using browser cache, so you can come back later and pick up where you left off—just don't clear your browsing data or you'll start over. Performance-wise, this is lightweight stuff. It'll run on basically any device, even older phones or tablets. The graphics are simple 2D images, so there's no lag or stuttering. Loads fast, plays smooth, no complaints there.
A decent time-killer if you need something brainless and relaxing, but it's cookie-cutter stuff with rough edges.
Simple and responsive. No complaints—tapping and zooming worked fine for me.
Developed by Drivix Games and released on September 10, 2025.