Find 5 things
Find 5 things - Play Online
You know those old "I Spy" books you flipped through as a kid? This is that, but on your screen. Find 5 things is a simple hidden object game where you stare at a photo and click on everyday items from a list—clocks, lamps, balconies, whatever they throw at you. It's pure attention training wrapped in a no-stress package. No timers, no explosions, just you versus a photograph.
Key Features
- 100 Levels to Clear: Each one shows a different photo with five items to hunt down.
- No Timer Pressure: Take your time. This isn't a speed challenge—you can zone out and click at your own pace.
- Hint System: Stuck? There's a hint button in the top-right corner to bail you out.
- Works Anywhere: Browser-based and lightweight. Runs on old laptops and phones without breaking a sweat.
How to Play Find 5 things
Getting started is dead simple. The challenge is training your eyes to stop missing the obvious.
Scan the Photo and Read the List
You're shown a static photograph—could be a church, a street, or an old building. At the bottom, there's a list of five objects written out in plain text. Your job is to memorize those words and start hunting. Look for shapes, colors, anything that matches the item names.
Click the Hidden Objects
Once you spot an item, click directly on it in the photo. If you're right, the word disappears from the list. If you're wrong, nothing happens—no penalty, no buzzer. You just keep clicking until you nail all five. Sometimes the objects are obvious (a giant clock tower), other times they're sneaky (a tiny flower pot tucked in a corner). That's the whole loop.
Progress Through 100 Levels
Clear all five items and you move to the next photo. The level counter in the top-left ticks up (9/100, 11/100, and so on). The photos change, the object lists shuffle, but the core mechanic stays identical. Use hints when you're stuck—no shame in it—and grind through to level 100 if you've got the patience.
Who is Find 5 things for?
This is a game for people who want zero stress. Perfect for killing five minutes while waiting for something to load, or for older relatives who just want a light brain teaser without complicated controls. Kids can play it safely—there's no violence, no ads screaming at you mid-game (at least not aggressively). If you're looking for adrenaline or skill expression, this isn't it. If you want a digital fidget spinner for your brain, you're in the right place.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's meditative to the point of being sleepy. The photos are stock-quality images—nothing fancy, just everyday European architecture and street scenes. There's no music that I noticed, no sound effects when you click. It's quiet. Almost too quiet. You could play this with a podcast running in the background and not miss a thing. Visually, it's bare-bones: rounded buttons, basic fonts, and low-res photos that look like they came from a free stock site. The UI does the job, but there's zero personality here.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game auto-saves your level progress in the browser cache, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off—just don't clear your browsing data or you'll restart from level 1. Performance-wise, it's feather-light. I tested it on an old laptop and it didn't even spin the fan. Mobile works fine too, though tapping tiny objects on a phone screen can be fiddly if your fingers aren't precise.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
It's harmless, functional, and completely forgettable—but that's kind of the point.
- ✅ Pro: No timer means zero anxiety. You can play this half-asleep.
- ✅ Pro: Runs on literally anything with a browser. No downloads, no installs.
- ❌ Con: Gets repetitive fast. After 20 levels, you've seen the whole formula—it's just new photos with the same five-object drill.
Controls
Responsive enough. Clicks register instantly, and the hit detection is forgiving—you don't need pixel-perfect accuracy.
- Desktop: Point and click with your mouse. That's it.
- Mobile: Tap the objects on the screen with your finger. Works best on tablets where you have more screen real estate.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Naumoff Games and released on November 13, 2024. It's a fresh release, though it feels like a throwback to the hidden object craze from the early 2010s mobile era.



