Ever spent an hour organizing your pantry and felt weirdly satisfied? That's this game in a nutshell. Sort Master is a collection of bite-sized puzzles where you drag, tap, and arrange everything from kitchen utensils to broken plates. Each level throws a new sorting challenge at you—match colors, fit objects into drawers, or piece together shattered items. It's like unpacking after a move, but without the back pain.
Getting started is dead simple, but some levels will make you think twice about your spatial reasoning skills.
You grab objects with your mouse or finger and drag them to their correct spots. Sometimes you're matching shapes to silhouettes in a drawer organizer—like fitting a rolling pin into its designated slot. Other times you're sorting items by color or size. The controls respond instantly, so it's all about your brain figuring out the pattern, not fighting with the interface.
Each level changes the rules on you. One moment you're organizing pet supplies around a chubby orange cat, the next you're reassembling a shattered plate by dragging ceramic shards back into position. The challenge isn't reflexes—it's spotting the logic. Does this jar go in the big slot or the small one? Which puzzle piece fits that gap? You'll know when you're right because everything clicks into place with a satisfying snap.
Once everything is sorted correctly, the level ends and you move to the next mini-game. There's no score to chase or stars to collect—you either finish it or you don't. The progression is linear, so you can't skip ahead, but honestly, I didn't want to. Each new puzzle type kept things fresh enough that I didn't get bored.
This is for anyone who finds cleaning videos oddly relaxing or enjoys games like A Little to the Left. Perfect if you're killing time on a lunch break or need something mindless after a stressful day. Parents can hand this to kids without worrying—there's no violence, no pressure, just gentle problem-solving. Not for adrenaline junkies though. If you need explosions and speedruns, look elsewhere.
It's incredibly chill. The pastel backgrounds and smooth animations give it an ASMR quality—you can almost hear the satisfying "thunk" when an item slots into place (even if the sound effects are minimal). The flat, vector-style graphics look polished but simple, like they were designed for phones that struggle with anything too fancy. I found myself zoning out in a good way, just dragging stuff around until it felt "right." The music is forgettable but not annoying, which is honestly ideal for this type of game.
The game saves your progress automatically using browser cache, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off. Just don't go nuclear on your browsing history or you'll lose your spot. Performance-wise, this runs smooth as butter even on older devices. The 2D graphics are so lightweight that I didn't experience a single stutter, even with other tabs open. If your phone can handle Instagram, it can handle this.
A solid time-waster that scratches the organization itch without demanding much from your brain or device.
Super responsive. Dragging feels precise, and the hitboxes are forgiving enough that you won't accidentally drop items.
Developed by hardiksavaliya037@gmail.com and released on August 26, 2025. It's a newer title riding the wave of organization puzzle games that exploded in popularity over the past couple years.