Patchwork
Hidden Object: Street Of Secrets
A Slime Hut
Fish Love Pins
Math Master
Spider Solitaire 2024
Animal Block Pop Puzzle
Construction Set - 3D Builder
Tap Wood Blocks Away
Video Store Simulator
Yarn Fever! Unravel Puzzle
Screw Puzzle 3D
Eat And Grow Fish
Pottery Master
Forest Clans
Logic Where
Empire City
Urban Stack
Mini Pool 3D
Steam Sorter
Wizard School
Owl House Apprentice
Catomino: Brain Puzzle
Created by: CDA Games
There is something deeply satisfying about organizing tiny disasters, especially when those disasters are shaped like cats with vacant little stares and questionable spatial awareness. This cozy logic puzzle turns the classic polyomino formula into a full-blown feline rescue operation where every oddly shaped cat has to fit perfectly onto a paw-print rug without leaving gaps. Some levels feel pleasantly meditative, others start to resemble a tiny architectural crisis involving chonky cats, blocked tiles, rolling yarn balls, and delicate vases that probably should not have been left near heavy animals in the first place. Fans can blow kittens around, yarn can be shoved off the rug to clear space, and certain extra hefty cats become adorable wrecking balls capable of smashing obstacles. It has the same satisfying 'just one more puzzle' energy as Tetris, Patchwork, and those old tangram books people used to keep near the family computer in 2002. The decorating side of the game adds another layer of cozy nonsense, because naturally your reward for solving advanced spatial logic puzzles is buying your cats ridiculous outfits and redecorating their room like an HGTV episode hosted entirely by gremlins. Earn goldfish to unlock wallpapers, furniture, flooring, and silly accessories, while rare blue diamond yarn lets you spin for bonus prizes and collectible goodies. The controls are pleasantly smooth on both PC and mobile, with drag-and-drop cat placement, camera rotation, and room exploration that makes the whole thing feel surprisingly tactile for a puzzle game. Fun fact, the mathematical study of shapes made from connected squares is called polyomino theory, and it became wildly popular after Martin Gardner wrote about it in Scientific American back in the 1950s. Basically, these little cat puzzles are secretly part of a long and noble tradition of people enthusiastically overthinking shapes for fun. Honestly, humanity has done worse things with its time.
Comments coming soon!