Ever wanted to turn a rundown mansion into a total showpiece? This is basically Homescapes' cousin—you match colorful tiles to earn resources, then spend them customizing every room in your dream house. It's all about solving match-3 puzzles to unlock new furniture, decorations, and areas. The loop is simple: beat levels, pick between a few design choices, watch your mansion transform. Perfect if you like light puzzle games mixed with interior design creativity.
Getting started is dead simple—mastering the later levels takes a bit more strategy.
You start each session on a match-3 grid filled with hearts, stars, donuts, and other bright pieces. Swap two adjacent tiles to line up three or more of the same type. They pop, you score points, and the board refills from the top. Clear the specific objectives (like "collect 20 hearts" or "break all the waffle blockers") before you run out of moves. Finish the level, and you earn brushes—the currency that powers your renovation dreams.
The puzzle boards throw blockers at you pretty quickly. Waffle tiles need multiple hits to crack, and some levels have irregular grids that make matching trickier. You'll see rocket boosters appear when you match four pieces in a row—these blast entire rows or columns. Combine two boosters for a big screen-clearing explosion. The catch? Moves are limited, so you need to think a few steps ahead instead of just matching randomly.
After beating a level, you return to the mansion view. Here, you spend your hard-earned brushes to pick between two or three design options for each item—maybe a mint-green bed versus a pink one, or modern curtains versus vintage drapes. Once you complete all the tasks in a room, you unlock the next area. The progression is super linear, but watching the mansion fill out room by room feels satisfying if you're into that HGTV vibe.
This is tailored for casual players who want a low-stress experience. If you've got 10 minutes on your lunch break or you're winding down before bed, it's perfect. The puzzles aren't punishing, and the decoration side is pure wish-fulfillment—no wrong answers, just personal taste. Families will find it totally safe for kids, and older players who loved Candy Crush but wanted more creative control will dig the combo. Not recommended if you crave hardcore puzzles or deep strategy—this is comfort food gaming.
It's super meditative once you settle into the rhythm. The match-3 boards have cheerful, over-saturated colors—lots of pinks, blues, and yellows that pop against the blurred backgrounds. Animations are smooth but basic: pieces squash when they drop, boosters spin a little before firing. The mansion scenes are clean but flat-lit, like a mid-2010s mobile game. No voice acting, just gentle sound effects (pops, chimes, the occasional jingle when you finish a room). You could easily listen to a podcast while playing. The whole thing feels designed to relax you, not challenge you to your limits.
Progress saves automatically in your browser cache, so as long as you don't clear your cookies or play in incognito mode, you're good. I tested it on a mid-tier laptop and an older phone—both ran smoothly with zero lag. The game pauses when you switch tabs, which is nice if you multitask. Only hiccup: if you're on a super slow connection, the initial load might take 10-15 seconds, but once it's up, everything runs locally.
A solid pick for fans of match-3 games who want a creative twist, but don't expect groundbreaking innovation.
Simple and responsive—no issues with misclicks or lag.
Developed by Fun Games World and released on September 3, 2025. They clearly know their audience—this is polished where it counts and streamlined everywhere else.