Organizing Scenarios
Each scenario below is a self-contained puzzle environment with its own spatial logic, sound profile, and difficulty curve. The base game includes all five core scenarios at no additional cost. Premium content packs add seasonal variations and bonus item sets.
Fridge Organization
You're looking at a fridge with adjustable shelves and a collection of jars, bottles, containers, and leftover wraps that need to fit. The challenge isn't just about filling space — it's about stacking in a way that keeps frequently-used items accessible while accommodating odd shapes like wine bottles and tall pitcher containers. Early rounds start with six to eight items and a simple two-shelf layout. Later rounds introduce adjustable shelf heights, door compartments, and irregular items like half-eaten cake boxes that only fit one specific way.
- Best for
- Players who enjoy spatial planning and want longer, more methodical sessions (8-15 minutes per round).
- Not ideal for
- Quick pick-up-and-play breaks. Fridge rounds take time to set up mentally.
- Difficulty tiers
- Three tiers based on item count (6-8, 10-14, 16-22 items) and shelf complexity.
- Pricing
- Included in the free base game. Seasonal fridge packs (holiday leftovers, summer BBQ) available as optional purchases at $0.99 each.
What's not included: This scenario does not include food preparation or cooking mechanics. It is purely about spatial arrangement. There is no nutritional information or recipe integration.
Travel Suitcase Packing
Packing a suitcase sounds straightforward until you see the item list. A rolled sweater takes up different space than a folded one. Shoes need to go in first because they're rigid. Toiletries have to fit in the side pocket without crushing the smaller items nearby. The suitcase scenario introduces the concept of flexible items — clothes that can be folded, rolled, or compressed — each method producing a different spatial footprint. Later rounds add a carry-on size restriction, meaning you can't just throw everything in and hope for the best.
- Best for
- Players who like strategic planning and don't mind making deliberate trade-offs between packing methods.
- Not ideal for
- Players who want fast rounds. Suitcase packing rewards patience and benefits from taking your time.
- Difficulty tiers
- Three tiers: weekend bag (6-8 items), carry-on (10-14 items), full suitcase (16-20 items with rigid and flexible items).
- Pricing
- Included in the free base game. Destination-themed packs (beach vacation, ski trip, business travel) available at $0.99 each.
What's not included: No weight simulation. Items don't have mass properties. The suitcase doesn't model airline weight limits because we felt that would shift the experience from relaxing to stressful.
Cosmetic Bag Arrangement
This is the quickest scenario and arguably the most popular for short breaks. You're fitting makeup brushes, palettes, compacts, and bottles into a zippered bag with elastic loops and mesh pockets. The bag has fixed compartments, which means you need to figure out which items belong in which section before you start placing. Brushes go in the elastic loops. Palettes stack vertically in the main compartment. Small items like lip balm fit in the mesh side pocket — but only if you haven't already filled it with something else.
- Best for
- Short play sessions during breaks or commutes. Average round time is 3-5 minutes.
- Not ideal for
- Players who prefer longer, more complex puzzles. Cosmetic bag rounds resolve quickly.
- Difficulty tiers
- Two tiers: everyday bag (8-10 items) and travel kit (12-16 items with overlapping compartments).
- Pricing
- Included in the free base game. Brand-themed cosmetic sets available as optional purchases at $0.99 each.
What's not included: No product recommendations or affiliate links to real cosmetic brands. The items in the game are generic representations. We do not partner with cosmetic companies for in-game placement.
Desk Drawer Sorting
A desk drawer full of stationery, cables, chargers, and small electronics needs to be sorted into a compartmentalized organizer. The interesting mechanic here is cable management — flexible cords that can be coiled, folded, or threaded through specific channels in the organizer. Getting a USB cable to route through a narrow channel while still leaving room for a pen holder requires the kind of spatial reasoning that feels genuinely rewarding when it clicks.
- Best for
- Players who enjoy a medium-complexity puzzle with a mix of rigid and flexible items. Sessions run 5-10 minutes.
- Not ideal for
- Players who find cable management visually confusing. The flexible item mechanic takes a round or two to learn.
- Difficulty tiers
- Two tiers: single drawer (8-10 items) and double drawer with cable tray (14-18 items).
- Pricing
- Included in the free base game. Specialty drawer sets (art supplies, electronics toolkit) available at $0.99 each.
What's not included: No productivity tips or desk organization advice. This is a game, not a lifestyle guide. We don't claim that playing this scenario will improve your real-world desk habits.
Kitchen Pantry Shelf
The pantry scenario is the most spatially complex option in the base game. Multiple shelves of varying depths, cans and boxes that need stacking, and a weight consideration that requires heavier items on lower shelves. You're organizing everything from cereal boxes and pasta containers to canned goods and spice jars, each with different dimensions and stacking rules. Some items can be nested (a small jar inside a larger box), which adds a layer of discovery.
- Best for
- Experienced players looking for the most challenging base-game scenario. Sessions run 12-20 minutes.
- Not ideal for
- First-time players. We recommend starting with the fridge or cosmetic bag scenario to learn the interaction model.
- Difficulty tiers
- Three tiers: single shelf (8-10 items), double shelf (14-18 items), full pantry (22-28 items with nesting and weight rules).
- Pricing
- Included in the free base game. Cultural pantry packs (Japanese, Mediterranean, Mexican pantry staples) available at $0.99 each.
What's not included: No recipe integration or meal planning features. The pantry scenario does not provide cooking suggestions or nutritional data.
Design Boundaries Across All Scenarios
- No timed challenges or speed runs. Every scenario can be played at your own pace without a clock.
- No randomized reward mechanics. Item sets are fixed per round, so you can retry and improve your approach.
- No energy systems. Play as many rounds as you want without waiting or paying to continue.
- No user-generated content or level sharing. All scenarios are designed and tested by our team.