Sort mixed balls into matching flasks. Tap, pour, repeat. Perelivy strips color-sorting down to pure logic—no timers, no lives, just you and a grid of mismatched flasks. Each pour shuffles the stack. Plan three moves ahead or burn your undo button. Later levels pack more colors, deeper flasks, and tighter puzzle knots that punish sloppy sequencing.
Group every color into its own flask. Click or tap a flask to lift the top ball, then click another flask to pour it in—only matching colors stack. Empty flasks act as temporary holding spaces. Use Undo to reverse bad moves. Use Restart when you paint yourself into a corner.
Select any flask. The top ball lifts. Click a second flask—if it is empty or the top ball matches your selection, the pour completes. Mismatched colors block the pour. Chain pours by clearing one color at a time, freeing space for harder swaps. Empty flasks are your lifeline; hold mixed balls there while you untangle the rest.
Early puzzles use three or four colors and shallow flasks. Mid-game levels introduce five or six hues, deeper stacks, and tighter starting arrangements that force multi-step sequences. Late puzzles demand reverse-engineering: trace the final state backward to find the opening move. No currency, no upgrades—just puzzle games progression tied to clear thinking.
Isolate one color first. Pour all matching balls into a single flask before touching the next hue. Keep at least one flask empty for shuffling. If a pour feels wrong, undo immediately—waiting three moves makes the tangle worse. Restart when you have burned through five undos with no progress. Memorize the opening state so resets feel faster.
Perelivy targets casual puzzle fans who crave methodical, screen-time-friendly challenges. If you enjoyed the flask-pouring logic of Nuts Puzzle: Sort by Color or the tactile thread-untangling of Yarn Fever! Unravel Puzzle, this game delivers the same satisfying planning loops. Mobile commuters, desktop break-takers, and anyone who sorts socks by shade will find the rhythm addictive. It works across Android, iOS, and desktop—no downloads, instant browser play.
Perelivy was developed by PlayNova. The studio focuses on browser-accessible color games that prioritize clean mechanics and instant playability across devices.
No. Pours only complete when the target flask is empty or its top ball matches the selected color. Mismatched colors block the pour, forcing you to find an empty flask or shuffle the stack.
Undo is unlimited. Tap or click the button to reverse the last pour as many times as needed. If you exhaust logical moves, hit Restart to reset the level from scratch.
You must undo moves to free space or restart the level. Empty flasks act as temporary holding zones—losing them mid-puzzle usually means you poured in the wrong order. Plan your sequence to keep at least one flask empty until the final color is isolated.
No. Perelivy runs in your browser via Playgama and requires an active internet connection. Once the page loads, gameplay is smooth, but you cannot cache levels for offline sessions.
No. Perelivy offers only Undo and Restart—no hint system, no timers, no power-ups. The design keeps focus on raw sorting logic, making every solution feel earned. If you prefer mechanical sorting with a similar vibe, try Screw Match for a twist on the same concept.