No timer. No move limit. No “game over” shaming you. Just you, a board full of tangled colour worms, and that quiet little click when the last one slides home.
Picture a little grid dotted with holes — each one ringed in a different colour. Scattered across it are worms, also colour-coded, all curled up and overlapping like a bowl of crayon spaghetti.
Your job is gently simple: get every worm into the hole that matches it. Drag a head, it slithers along, and the whole tail follows. Pick the wrong order and a worm ends up blocking the path of another. That's the whole puzzle — figuring out who goes first.
No countdown ticking in your ear. No “3 moves left”. You can stare at a level for ten seconds or ten minutes and the game genuinely does not care. It's the rare puzzle that feels like it's on your side.
Most “relaxing” games still sneak in a timer or an energy meter. This one doesn't. Nothing punishes you for thinking. It's the closest a puzzle gets to a deep breath.
The trick isn't the colours — it's the order. Untangle the wrong worm first and it walls off half the board. Solving a knotty one gives you that clean little “ohhh, obviously” hit.
Just when it feels solved-out, along come frozen worms you have to thaw, hidden tunnels, and blocked routes. Hundreds of levels, and it keeps quietly changing the rules.
Soft candy background, bright crayon worms, a satisfying little pop when one settles in. It's the visual equivalent of a colouring book — easy to look at, easy to keep going.
Scattered like the worms themselves. Hover one to straighten it out — old habits, I guess.
“Perfect for winding down at night. No ads shoved in my face every ten seconds, no timer stressing me out. I just… solve worms until I fall asleep.”
“Thought it'd be too simple. Then a level in the 40s had me genuinely thinking about which worm to move first. Sneaky little game.”
“My daughter and I take turns on the harder ones. The colours are so cute and it's the one game I don't mind her playing.”
“Would love a few more obstacle types down the line, but honestly for a free relaxing puzzle it's already miles better than most. The undo button is a lifesaver.”
It's free, it's calm, and it's exactly the right amount of “just one more level”. Fair warning: the last one is never actually the last one.
Get it onGoogle Play