The games you remember from early computers and mobile phones — rebuilt for modern browsers. Speed timers, global leaderboards, dark mode. No Flash, no ads, no account.
Minesweeper, Sudoku and 2048 have been played by billions of people across decades. They survived because their mechanics are nearly perfect: simple rules, deep strategy, infinite replayability. No tutorial needed, no story to follow — just play.
Microsoft shipped Minesweeper with Windows 3.1 in 1990. The original purpose was to teach users how to use a mouse with left and right clicks. Thirty-five years later it remains one of the most-played games in computing history.
2048 was created by Gabriele Cirulli in a single weekend in 2014. Within a month it had 4 million players. The key innovation was making the 2× merging mechanic visual and tactile — the same satisfaction as solving a Rubik's cube face, repeatable indefinitely.