Ever played one of those satisfying "unscrew everything" mobile games that went viral? This is basically that, but in your browser. Your goal is simple: remove screws and bolts strategically so wooden planks fall off the board without locking yourself into an impossible situation. It's a brain-training puzzle game that starts chill but gets surprisingly tricky once the pieces start overlapping. Perfect for killing time while pretending to be productive.
Getting started is dead simple, but mastering the later puzzles will make you question your IQ.
You tap or click on any screw to select it. The game highlights empty holes with a green plus sign—those are your valid drop zones. Click the hole you want, and the screw moves there. Simple mechanic, but the order you remove things matters a lot.
Once you unscrew a bolt holding a plank, gravity kicks in. Wooden pieces drop or shift based on basic physics. The trick is figuring out which screws to pull first so you don't trap the remaining ones under fallen boards. One wrong move and you're stuck restarting the level.
Your goal is to remove every single screw and let all the planks fall off. Early puzzles have straight layouts, but later ones throw in angled pieces and multi-layer structures. You'll need to visualize the collapse sequence in your head before making moves—it's like planning a Jenga tower demolition.
This is perfect for casual players who want a low-stress brain teaser during coffee breaks. If you're the type who finds satisfaction in organizing a messy desk or watching "oddly satisfying" videos, you'll dig this. It's safe for kids too—no violence, no reading required, just spatial logic. Not recommended for adrenaline junkies; there's zero action here.
It's weirdly meditative. There's no music assault or flashy effects—just soft clicks when screws move and the satisfying thunk of wood hitting the ground. The clean aesthetic keeps things calming, though I'll admit staring at the same wooden textures for 30 levels gets visually boring. The difficulty curve is fair but unforgiving; you can't brute-force your way through the tougher puzzles without thinking.
The game auto-saves your progress in browser cache, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off—just don't go nuking your browsing data. Performance-wise, it's lightweight as hell. I ran it on a potato laptop with zero lag. The Unity engine keeps things smooth even on older phones, though you might see the occasional ad between levels (standard free browser game stuff).
A solid time-killer that respects your brain without stressing you out.
Responsive and foolproof. Point and click does all the work.
Developed by bsplaygama@gmail.com and released on October 17, 2024. It's a no-frills browser puzzle that does exactly what it advertises.