









Deadly Descent
Fruit Merge: Juicy Drop Game
Steal Brainrot Online
Stickman Kombat 2D
My Town Home: Family Playhouse
Piece of Cake: Merge & Bake
Hazmob FPS: Online Shooter
Gym Simulator Online, Escape
Melon Sandbox
Sprunki World Online RP - Play with Friends!DOP
DOP - Play Online
Ever stared at a picture and thought, "Something's missing here"? That's the whole vibe of DOP. This is a hyper-casual puzzle game where you literally draw the missing piece to complete silly scenarios—like giving a squirrel its acorn or a knight his sword. It's a brain teaser disguised as a coloring book, perfect for quick sessions when you need a mental break without the stress.
Key Features
- Hundreds of Visual Puzzles: Each level presents a new scenario with one missing element to draw.
- Works Anywhere: Runs smoothly on old PCs and phones—the graphics are super basic 2D vectors, so no lag.
- Hint System: Dashed lines show you exactly where to draw if you get stuck.
- Kid-Friendly Design: Bright colors, simple scenarios, and zero violence make it safe for all ages.
How to Play DOP
Getting started is dead simple—mastering the logic takes a bit more brainpower.
Spot the Missing Piece
You look at a scene—maybe a fox without a tail, or a fisherman with no fishing rod. The game highlights the empty spot with a dashed outline. Your job? Figure out what's supposed to go there. Sometimes it's obvious, sometimes you need to think for a second.
Draw the Solution
You drag your mouse (or finger on mobile) to sketch the missing object. Don't stress about making it perfect—the game isn't checking your art skills. As long as you draw roughly within the outlined area, the game replaces your scribble with a polished version of the correct item. A green checkmark pops up, and boom, level complete.
Progress Through Levels
You move from one puzzle to the next. Early levels are laughably easy (draw a circle for an apple), but later ones require you to actually think about context. The difficulty ramps up gradually, introducing more abstract scenarios where the "missing piece" isn't always a physical object.
Who is DOP for?
This is aimed squarely at casual players and kids. If you're looking for something to kill 5 minutes while waiting for a coffee, it's perfect. Parents can hand this to a 6-year-old without worrying—it's educational in a sneaky way, teaching basic logic and observation. Hardcore gamers will probably find it too shallow after 10 levels, though.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's incredibly chill. No timers, no punishment for wrong answers, no stress. The art style is that generic "mobile game cartoon" look—flat colors, round shapes, friendly character designs. There's barely any sound design to speak of—just little success chimes when you complete a puzzle. Honestly, it feels like one of those games designed to be played while you're half-watching TV. The whole thing has that "asset flip" energy where you've seen these exact squirrel and knight graphics in 50 other games.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
Your progress saves automatically in your browser's local storage, so you can pick up where you left off—just don't clear your cache or you'll lose everything. Performance-wise, this runs on a potato. The graphics are so simple that even a 10-year-old laptop will handle it without breaking a sweat. No downloads, no installation, just click and play.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A harmless time-killer that does what it says on the tin—nothing more, nothing less.
- ✅ Pro: Zero learning curve—anyone can jump in and understand it in 5 seconds.
- ✅ Pro: Genuinely relaxing with no pressure or fail states.
- ❌ Con: Gets repetitive fast—after 20 levels, you've basically seen all the mechanics the game has to offer.
Controls
Super responsive, though the "drawing" is more like tracing a shape over a designated area than actual freehand art.
- Desktop: Click and drag with your mouse to draw the missing object.
- Mobile: Tap and drag with your finger—works perfectly on touchscreens.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Игры бесплатно and released on January 1, 2023. It's part of that wave of hyper-casual puzzle games flooding the browser market.

