Wizard School
Tropical merge
Emerland Solitaire
Royal Family Tree
Pull the Pin Fish Rescue
Alien Intelligence Test
Funny pumpkins
Mini Pool 3D
Screw Puzzle 3D
Organizer Master
Cozy Sorting
Pretty Tidy
Cat Disco!
Cribbage JD
Westland Survival
Mermaid Pet Shop
Ice Cream Maker
TB World
Sum Master
Interior Designer - Decor Life
Escape The Ghost Town
Wood Screw: Bolts Puzzle
Created by: FreePlay LLC
A pile of wooden planks, a handful of stubborn screws, and one simple goal, figure out which bolt to remove first without causing the whole structure to jam up like a badly assembled IKEA bookshelf. Each level presents a small wooden contraption where boards are pinned together with screws, and your job is to twist them out in the correct order so the pieces can slide, fall, and clear the board. It starts off friendly enough, just a few planks leaning on each other, but the puzzles quickly turn into clever little engineering problems where every move affects the rest of the structure. Pull the wrong screw too early and a board might block a hole you still need, forcing you to rethink the whole sequence. The trick is learning to read the puzzle like a mini blueprint, spotting which pieces are trapped and which ones will free up once the right bolt disappears. It is the same kind of quiet logic satisfaction you get from games like Unblock Me or classic mechanical puzzles where the solution suddenly clicks and everything falls into place. The controls are simple, tap or click screws to remove them, watch the boards shift, then plan the next move before you run out of useful holes. Fun fact: the screw itself is one of humanity's oldest mechanical inventions, dating back to ancient Greece where mathematician Archimedes designed the famous 'Archimedes screw' (Greek: 'κοχλίας', pronounced kokhlias) to move water uphill for irrigation, which proves that fiddling with clever spirals has been entertaining human brains for over two thousand years. By the time later levels arrive with overlapping boards, tricky angles, and limited spaces for removed screws, you may find yourself staring at the screen with the same thoughtful expression as a carpenter planning a complicated repair, except here the only tool you need is patience and a good sense of puzzle logic.
Comments coming soon!