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Ratings, screenshots, version and install tier are treated as public store signals, not as a LogicAppGuide endorsement.
Curated brain-training & logic apps for Android
Flow Puzzle! is covered in the LogicAppGuide Android app library as a Puzzle app. Use this page to compare fit, screenshots and public signals, while the official Google Play listing remains the source for installation decisions.
For the Puzzle category, LogicAppGuide looks for a clear use case: what problem the app solves, how quickly a reader can judge fit, and whether its screenshots and public signals make sense beside nearby picks.
Its 0.0 star average deserves extra caution; read recent low-star reviews before spending time with it.
The visible update date is 2022-12-19. Treat that as a maintenance clue, then confirm on Google Play because version notes, compatibility and permissions can change after this page is generated.
Before opening the official listing for Flow Puzzle!, compare the screenshots with your actual use case and check whether the developer, pricing model and permission requests match what you expect from this type of app.
Ratings, screenshots, version and install tier are treated as public store signals, not as a LogicAppGuide endorsement.
Use the official listing to confirm permissions, current pricing, compatibility and the newest user reviews.
Review basis: Google Play listing metadata, screenshots, public rating signals, store feature claims, and LogicAppGuide category comparison.
Flow Puzzle! is a small, minimalist puzzle game from Dmitriy Kurylev with a premise that is related to connection puzzles but not identical to the famous Flow Free style. The store summary says the goal is to connect small balls with big ones and fill the big balls completely. The short description adds that matching the small balls with the big ones produces the right numbers and lets the player pass levels. Based on that wording, this is a compact logic puzzle about routing or assigning pieces to targets until each large ball reaches a required value.
The most important thing to understand is that the listing is sparse. There is no long feature list, no named difficulty system, no advertised level count, no hint description, and no public review history. That does not make the app bad, but it does change how it should be judged. Flow Puzzle! looks like a small independent release rather than a mass-market casual game. It may appeal to players who like direct puzzle ideas without heavy monetization, but it does not provide the same amount of upfront evidence as larger puzzle apps.
The core mechanic sounds pleasantly clean. Connecting small balls to big balls gives the player an immediate objective: each small ball likely contributes something, and each big ball needs to be filled to the correct number. If the levels are well designed, the challenge should come from deciding which small balls belong to which targets and how those connections can coexist. The "flow" name suggests paths may matter, while the "right numbers" phrase suggests arithmetic or capacity constraints may also be involved. That combination could create a nice blend of visual routing and lightweight logic.
Compared with standard line-connection games, Flow Puzzle! appears more target-based. In many flow games, the player connects matching colors while filling every cell of a grid. Here, the description focuses on filling big balls completely, which implies the endpoint's requirement matters more than simply drawing a colored path. Compared with number-link puzzles, it may be more casual and object-based. Compared with color sorting games, it seems less about ordering stacks and more about matching sources to destinations. That makes it interesting despite the modest listing.
The public signals are the biggest caution. Flow Puzzle! lists only 100+ installs, 0 ratings, 0 reviews, and a rating value of 0. In practical terms, there is no community verdict yet in the available metadata. A player cannot rely on rating averages, written feedback, or install momentum to predict the experience. The app was released and last updated on December 19, 2022, with version 1.2, so it also does not show recent maintenance in this dataset. That may be fine for a finished small puzzle game, but users on newer Android devices should be aware of the age.
The purchase profile is unusually clean. The metadata marks Flow Puzzle! as free, not ad-supported, and without in-app purchases. That is a meaningful advantage. Many small puzzle apps are free but include ads; many larger ones use coin systems or paid hints. This one appears to avoid both. If the metadata reflects the actual experience, players can try the app without expecting interruptions, upsells, or premium unlock pressure. For a tiny puzzle release, that can be more appealing than a crowded feature list.
The content rating is Everyone, and the described mechanic sounds family-friendly. Small-ball and big-ball matching should be understandable to children if the interface is clear, while the number-filling element could make later levels interesting for adults. The best audience is someone who enjoys experimenting with puzzle rules and does not need a heavily reviewed app before installing. It may also suit players who want a short, quiet logic toy rather than an endless progression system.
Difficulty and pacing are hard to assess from the listing alone. The description promises "interesting levels" but does not say how many, whether there are difficulty tiers, or whether hints are available. A good version of this concept would start with obvious one-to-one matches, then introduce overlapping paths, multiple targets with similar requirements, and levels where one wrong assignment leaves a big ball underfilled or overfilled. A weaker version would become repetitive if every solution is visible immediately. Because there are no reviews, players will need to judge the level design firsthand.
There are also usability questions. Connection puzzles depend on clear touch handling: paths should be easy to draw or assign, mistakes should be easy to undo, and target numbers should stay readable. The listing includes 9 screenshots, which is enough to preview the interface visually, but the text does not mention undo, reset, accessibility options, or offline support. Since the app has no ads and no IAP, the main risk is not monetization; it is whether the interface and level library are polished enough to hold attention.
Overall, Flow Puzzle! is best viewed as a small, free, no-ads puzzle experiment with a promising source-to-target concept and very limited public evidence. Its strengths are the clean monetization profile, simple family-friendly premise, and potentially interesting mix of connection and number-filling logic. Its weaknesses are the tiny install base, no ratings or reviews, sparse description, and older update date. Curious puzzle fans may find it worth a try precisely because it is lightweight and free, but anyone looking for a proven, content-rich puzzle app should treat it as an unknown indie option.