Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Puzzles
Score: 7.4
HTML5 Physics Puzzle

How to Play

drop and drag choose a piece and move it sort the colors

Description

Chain Color Sort is one of those deceptively simple little puzzle games that’s somehow both soothing and oddly tense at the same time. The main idea’s right there in the name: you’re faced with a bunch of colored chains in a knotty mess, and you need to separate them by color. Just sorting them out sounds easy, but after a few rounds—yeah, it gets trickier. You use your mouse (or finger, if you’re on mobile) to grab these squiggly links. Sometimes it almost feels like untying real jewelry chains; tug one way and suddenly another part slips loose or tangles up even more. There’s a bit of physics at play here, not too heavy-handed but just enough that you have to pay attention to how things move when you pull or twist. The pacing is leisurely at first, letting you get used to the way the chains react. But once extra colors pop in? Well, it stops being just about patience—you really start strategizing which piece to move first so you don’t trap yourself. It’s interesting how calming yet stubbornly challenging this can be—kind of like untangling headphone wires but far less frustrating! Probably best for players who appreciate puzzles that don’t rush you but still nudge your brain every step.

Editor's View

Honestly, I didn’t expect much when I started Chain Color Sort—it looks harmless enough with those soft colors and gentle music humming along in the background. At first I thought: "Alright, just drag these blue ones over here." But wow—the knots get complicated pretty quickly. There were moments where I found myself staring at the screen trying to figure out which chain would actually come free without messing everything else up. That part really matters, really. The controls are smooth most of the time—though occasionally a chain reacts in an unexpected way and suddenly my plans unravel (literally). A little annoying? Sure, sometimes—but never enough that I wanted to quit. To be honest, this ended up being more satisfying than I expected. It doesn’t dazzle visually and probably won’t excite action fans much—but if slow-burn spatial puzzles are your thing? Worth a try.