Ever feel the itch to organize something messy until it's perfectly sorted? Liquid Sort Puzzle scratches that exact itch. Your mission is simple but weirdly satisfying: pour colored liquids between glass tubes until each container holds only one pure color. It's a brain-training color-matching game that starts easy and gets deviously tricky fast. One wrong pour and you're stuck in a logic knot that'll make you restart the level.
Getting started takes seconds, but solving the later levels? That'll test your planning skills.
You tap one glass to select it, then tap another to pour. Simple, right? Here's the catch: you can only pour liquid if the top color in the source glass matches the top color in the receiving glass. And the receiving glass needs enough space. No random dumping allowed.
This is where the game gets you. You'll pour orange into orange, feel like a genius, then realize you've blocked yourself from separating the blue and green layers underneath. I spent way too long on level 12 because I kept creating dead-end situations. You need to think three moves ahead, like chess but with colorful liquids.
The goal is to finish with every glass holding just one color. The game tracks your move count, so there's a score-chasing element if you're into optimization. When you nail it, confetti explodes on screen—a small dopamine hit that keeps you hitting "next level" way past your bedtime.
This is perfect for anyone who loves organizing things or solving spatial puzzles. If you're the type who color-codes your bookshelf or gets satisfaction from Tetris, you'll vibe with this. It's also great for short sessions—each level takes 1-3 minutes, making it perfect for the bus, waiting rooms, or pretending to work during a boring Zoom call. Kids can play it too since there's zero violence, just pure problem-solving.
This game is zen until it suddenly isn't. The ultra-minimalist aesthetic—just tubes, colors, and a grid background—keeps things calm and focused. No music to speak of, just satisfying liquid-pouring sound effects. It's meditative when you're flowing through easy levels, then mildly infuriating when you're stuck redoing the same puzzle for the fifth time. The visual feedback is solid: liquids have a nice bubble texture when active, and that confetti burst when you win feels earned.
The game saves your progress automatically in your browser cache, so you can close the tab and come back later without losing your place. Just don't go clearing your browsing data or you'll start over. Performance-wise, this runs smooth as butter even on older devices. The simple 2D graphics mean zero lag, and it loads almost instantly. Works equally well on desktop and mobile—the touch controls feel just as responsive as mouse clicks.
A solid pick for puzzle fans who want something bite-sized but challenging.
Super responsive. I never had a misclick ruin a puzzle, which is rare for browser games.
Developed by Drivix Games and released on September 15, 2025. They kept the design philosophy dead simple, which honestly works in the game's favor.