







Hidden Object: Clues and Mysteries
My Town Home: Family Playhouse
Plants vs Zombies Fusion Edition
Playground Man! Ragdoll Show!
Snake 2048
Hidden Object: My Hotel
Piece of Cake: Merge & Bake
Sprunki World Online RP - Play with Friends!Tricky Stories
Tricky Stories - Play Online
Ever seen those "brain teaser" puzzles that make you feel dumb until you realize the answer was stupid simple all along? That's Tricky Stories in a nutshell. It's basically a clone of Brain Test or those riddle games that flooded mobile ads a few years back—you get quirky scenarios, tap on stuff, and try to solve logic puzzles that often require thinking way outside the box. One level you're helping someone escape prison, the next you're trying to make a character lose weight. It's light, silly, and designed to kill 5 minutes at a time.
Key Features
- Multiple Oddball Scenarios: From prison breaks to weight loss challenges—each level is a mini-story with its own weird logic.
- Runs on Anything: Super lightweight browser game with simple 2D vector art. Works fine on older phones and low-spec PCs.
- Lateral Thinking Required: The solutions aren't always obvious—sometimes you literally need to interact with the text itself or use items multiple times.
- Hint System Available: Stuck? The game offers hints (probably ad-supported, though I didn't see intrusive popups during my session).
How to Play Tricky Stories
Getting started is dead simple, but actually solving some puzzles? That'll make you scratch your head.
Read the Scenario and Spot the Clues
Each level presents a short situation—maybe it's students in a classroom looking sad, or inmates trying to escape guards with flashlights. You need to read the prompt carefully and look at every element on screen. Sometimes the answer is hiding in plain sight, like a background object you didn't notice at first glance.
Interact with Everything
This is where it gets tricky. You can drag items onto characters, tap objects multiple times, or even interact with the question text itself. I'm not joking—one puzzle made me actually "set fire" to part of the UI. The game rewards experimentation, so if your first idea doesn't work, try something ridiculous. Use your mouse on desktop to click and drag, or just tap away on mobile.
Use Hints When You're Stuck
If you're banging your head against a puzzle for too long, the hint button is there. It'll nudge you in the right direction without completely spoiling the answer. Based on the genre, I'm guessing watching a short ad unlocks hints, but the game didn't force it on me during the first few levels.
Who is Tricky Stories for?
Perfect for casual players who want bite-sized puzzles during a coffee break or while waiting for the bus. It's safe for kids—no violence, just goofy cartoon scenarios—but some riddles might frustrate younger players since the logic can be pretty obtuse. Teens and adults who enjoy wordplay and "gotcha" puzzles will get the most out of it. If you liked those Facebook riddle posts your aunt shares, you'll probably enjoy this.
The Gameplay Vibe
It's super chill and low-stakes. No timers breathing down your neck, no game-overs that punish you. You just tap around, experiment, and eventually stumble into the solution. The art style is basic—think "notebook doodles" with simple vector characters on textured paper backgrounds. Nothing fancy, but it gets the job done. There's no real soundtrack to speak of, just light UI sounds, so feel free to throw on a podcast or music while you play. It's meditative in a "casually poking at stuff" kind of way.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game saves your progress automatically using browser storage, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off later. Just don't go clearing your cache or you'll lose everything. Performance-wise, it's lightweight as hell—I had zero lag even with other tabs open. If your device can run a web browser, it can run this game. No downloads, no installs, just click and play.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A decent time-waster if you're into lateral thinking puzzles, but don't expect anything groundbreaking.
- ✅ Pro: Instant play with zero friction—no account creation, no downloads.
- ✅ Pro: Some puzzles are genuinely clever and will make you laugh when you figure them out.
- ❌ Con: It's a genre clone with low-budget art. If you've played Brain Test or similar games, you've basically played this already.
Controls
Super responsive. Point-and-click feels snappy, and touch controls work fine on mobile without any weird dead zones.
- Desktop: Mouse to click, drag, and interact with objects and UI elements.
- Mobile: Tap and drag with your finger—works smoothly on any screen size.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Lobster Games and released on January 1, 2023. It's one of many entries in the hyper-casual puzzle space they've been cranking out.

