Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Puzzles
Score: 7.1
2D 8 Ball Pool Ball Puzzle

How to Play

HOW TO PLAY bull Tap any tube to move the ball lying on top of the tube to another tube bull The rule is that you can only move a ball on top of another ball if both of them have the same color and the tube you want to move into has enough space

Description

Ball Sort doesn’t exactly hide its concept—it’s all about those colored balls and the tubes they live in. The main idea? You’ve got to shuffle and pour each ball from one tube to another until you’re left with neatly sorted colors, each tube pure from top to bottom. Easy in theory. In practice though, well, sometimes it can be a bit fiddly. Early levels almost lull you with their simplicity. Later on—suddenly you have more colors than you expected, limited spaces, and those “oh no, I can’t move anything” moments start cropping up. Controls are ultra-basic: tap a tube to pick up the top ball, then tap another tube to drop it in (if there’s room). There’s not really a timer or hard fail state; pacing is easygoing unless your own patience runs thin! Some people might find that part relaxing, but if you want fast action… this probably isn’t for you. You know, it’s interesting how quickly these puzzles start feeling familiar but never quite repetitive. If organizing things calms you down or you love patterns and order, Ball Sort fits right in your playlist. It doesn’t demand too much commitment either—a few rounds here and there work just fine.

Editor's View

At first glance Ball Sort felt like one of those pass-the-time kind of games—I honestly didn’t expect much depth at all. Then by level six or so I caught myself strategizing hard on which balls needed moving first. I love the simple controls and the way it steadily ramps up the difficulty without really stressing me out. The lack of music does make things feel quiet (maybe too quiet at times), but that also means fewer distractions when I'm plotting my next move. It did get slightly repetitive after a while if I binged too many levels in a row—so it's definitely better as something I play between other tasks rather than for hours straight. Still, when I do solve a particularly tough arrangement it feels pretty satisfying. Well… not perfect but very good at what it sets out to do.