Starting a session
Go to the games section on the home page. Each card shows art, a short description, and a play button. Press play and the title opens inside a window on the same page. Close it when you are done and pick another card.
Controls: touch, mouse, and keyboard
On a phone, most games expect taps and drags. On a laptop, the mouse replaces your finger. A few arcade-style picks also listen for arrow keys or space. Watch the short tutorial each game shows on first load; publishers tune those hints for their own rules.
Goal of puzzle-style titles
Physics puzzlers usually ask you to move objects, cut lines, or trigger gadgets so a character reaches a treat or exit. There is rarely a single solution: experiment, undo mentally, and try a different order if you are stuck.
Tips for beginners
- Let the level settle before you act; momentum matters in rope and chain puzzles.
- If stars or bonus items exist, grab them only when the main goal is still safe.
- Turn sound on once; audio cues often warn you before a trap triggers.
- When a stage feels unfair, restart clean instead of stacking small mistakes.
Advanced habits
Speedrunners and high-score chasers rehearse the first three moves until they are automatic. For merge-and-run style games, plan two merges ahead so you do not trap yourself in a corner. Arena titles reward pattern recognition: learn spawn timing instead of button mashing.
If something breaks
Disable aggressive ad blockers for a moment, try another browser, or use the “open in a new tab” line under our player. Corporate networks sometimes strip embedded content; your phone’s data connection is a good quick test.