You know those tile-matching games that your aunt plays on her phone during family dinners? This is exactly that. Master of 3 Tiles is a straightforward puzzle game where you tap tiles to move them into a holding bar and match three identical ones to clear them. It's the same formula as Tile Master, Zen Match, and about a hundred other clones—nothing fancy, nothing revolutionary, but it works for killing time. Your goal is simple: clear the board without filling up your 7-slot inventory bar.
The basics take about 10 seconds to learn, but later levels will make you think twice about every move.
You tap any tile that's on top of the pile—anything covered by other tiles is locked. Each tile you select flies down to your inventory bar at the bottom, which has 7 slots total. The tiles have cute food themes: pizzas, sushi, cupcakes, that sort of thing.
When three identical tiles land in your bar, they automatically vanish. This is your lifeline. If you fill all 7 slots without making a match, it's game over. The trick is planning ahead—you can't just tap randomly or you'll end up with six different tiles and nowhere to go.
You get a few freebies: Undo buttons to take back mistakes, Shuffle to rearrange the board, and an Add Slot option to get breathing room. But these run out fast, and I'm guessing the game wants you to watch ads or pay to refill them. Classic mobile game move.
This is perfect for casual players who want a low-stress brain teaser during coffee breaks or commutes. No timers, no pressure, no flashy animations—just you and a pile of tiles. It's also kid-friendly since there's zero violence or complicated mechanics. If you're looking for something deep or original, though, keep scrolling. This is comfort food gaming, not a gourmet meal.
It's incredibly chill. The pace is entirely up to you—there's no countdown clock or enemies chasing you. The graphics are basic 2D vector art with flat colors and simple gradients. Nothing impressive, but it runs smooth even on older devices. There's probably some background music, but honestly, I'd just throw on a podcast and zone out. The satisfaction comes from those little moments when three tiles match and clear right before you run out of space.
The game saves your progress automatically using browser storage, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off later—just don't clear your cache or you'll lose everything. Performance-wise, this thing could probably run on a calculator. The low-budget graphics mean zero lag, even on budget phones or ancient laptops. It's accessible on desktop and mobile without any installation hassle.
A decent time-waster that does what it promises, but don't expect anything groundbreaking.
Simple and responsive—exactly what you'd expect from a mobile-first puzzle game.
Developed by Alexander and released on October 25, 2024. It's a recent addition to the endless pile of tile-matching puzzle games flooding browsers right now.