Visual Assets
8 screenshotsStore Profile
Identity
- Publisher
- SayGames LTD
- iOS app ID
- 6590876141
Market Signals
- US top free
- 42
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| iOS app ID | 6590876141 |
|---|---|
| ios bundle id | com.awesome.puzzlehexasort |
| ios title | Color Slide - Hexa Puzzle |
| Publisher | SayGames LTD |
| downloads bucket | 10M+ |
| store category | Puzzle |
| content rating | 4+ |
| ios version | 2.0 |
| ios current version release date | 2026-05-14 |
| ios rating average | 4.68 |
| ios rating count | 42747 |
| ios price | 0 |
| ios size mb | 336.6 |
| US top free | 42 |
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Color Slide’s loop is a compact spatial sorting puzzle: place or slide colored hex stacks onto a board, merge or clear matching colors/numbers, receive satisfying stack movement and currency feedback, then solve the next denser board with boosters or constraints.
The riskiest uncertainty is whether the hex stack mechanic produces satisfying planning or only colorful clearing, because the images show many effects but leave the exact decision rule and failure logic partly ambiguous.
Color Slide has promising local puzzle depth if stack color, number, height, board space, queue visibility, and boosters interact predictably. The visible risk is shallow tactile breadth: colorful stacks, clears, coins, and boosters may feel satisfying without producing durable planning depth.
15 of 15 responses include lens metadata.

Good fit for familiar, readable puzzle play, with trust concerns around help and payment pressure.
I would probably download it because it looks like a clear tile puzzle with rules I could learn quickly. The hex board reminds me enough of board and matching games that I would feel comfortable trying it. I would want the game to explain mistakes gently and not hide help behind pressure to pay. The large colored pieces look easy to follow, which matters more to me than flashy effects.
Good fit for familiar, readable puzzle play, with trust concerns around help and payment pressure.I like that the tile layout looks familiar and easy to understand.
I would be put off if help or progress feels tied to pushy spending.
The large colored hex pieces look clear enough for comfortable play.
I would try this if I wanted a gentle planning puzzle, because sliding and arranging colors looks more thoughtful than fast. It does not appear stressful, and I like games where I can take a moment to choose the next move. I would be cautious if it pushes streaks, passes, or daily rewards too hard, since that makes relaxing play feel like work. The clean boards make the choices look simple enough without a lot of clutter.
Solid fit for low-stress planning and clean presentation, limited by concern about obligation-driven monetization or retention pressure.I like that it appears to offer simple planning without rushing me.
I would not like streaks or paid progress making the game feel demanding.
The clean puzzle boards look calm and not overloaded with icons.
I would download it on a tablet if the pieces stay as large as they look in the store images. The game seems calm and visual, and I like that I would not need quick reflexes or complicated buttons. My worry is that free puzzle games sometimes add too many pop-ups after the first few levels. The colored hex board looks pleasant to sit with, and the lack of a crowded screen makes it feel approachable.
High visual comfort and calm pacing fit for tablet play, with some trust risk from possible interruptions in a free-to-play puzzle.I like that the game looks calm and comfortable for a larger screen.
I would dislike frequent pop-ups interrupting a peaceful puzzle session.
The uncluttered board and large color pieces look tablet-friendly.
I would try it, but only if I can keep the experience peaceful without constant ads. The puzzle looks easy to understand and could be satisfying as I work through levels at my own speed. I am willing to pay for ad-free play when the price is clear, but I would avoid anything that feels like a confusing subscription or pressure campaign. The simple board and large pieces make it look trustworthy enough for a first download.
Download intent is positive if monetization remains transparent, because the puzzle appears readable, calm, and level-based.I like that it looks like a calm level-based puzzle I can solve at my own pace.
I would avoid it if ads or unclear payments interrupt the experience.
The simple board gives me more confidence that the game will be easy to follow.
I would download this for a daily puzzle routine because it looks clear, colorful, and not rushed. I like games where I can get better level by level without needing fast reactions, and this seems to fit that. My concern is whether the free version will interrupt me with ads when I am trying to relax. The touch-based hex board looks straightforward, so I would feel comfortable giving it a try.
Strong fit for daily calm puzzle play, with retention tied to steady level progression and low ad interruption.I like that it looks suitable for calm daily progress.
I would dislike frequent ads breaking the quiet puzzle routine.
The hex board looks clear and easy to control with simple taps or swipes.

Strong short-session fit for a busy player, dependent on low interruption and clear pacing.
I would download this for short breaks because it looks simple enough to pause when family or work interrupts me. The color-sorting puzzle seems like a good brain-off activity, and I like that the goal appears clear without a long tutorial. My main concern is pop-ups or daily pressure that make a quick session feel like a task. The board is bright and easy to read, which makes it look practical for one-handed play.
Strong short-session fit for a busy player, dependent on low interruption and clear pacing.I like that it looks simple to understand and pause quickly.
I would dislike any daily pressure or pop-ups that make short play feel demanding.
The bright hex board looks readable enough for quick one-handed sessions.
I would consider downloading it because it looks like a light strategy puzzle I could pick up without a long setup. Moving colors around a hex board seems like it could offer enough planning to be satisfying after work. I would not expect a social game here, so it needs good level variety and clear goals to keep me interested. The landscape store images make the board look spacious and readable, which helps me trust that the play will not feel cramped.
Good puzzle fit for planning and readability, but retention depends on meaningful level design rather than social or story systems.I like that the puzzle board looks open enough to think through moves comfortably.
I am unsure whether it has enough meaningful decisions to hold my attention.
The wide board presentation makes it look less cramped than many phone puzzles.
I would download it if I could quickly tell that the ads are manageable or that an ad-free option is fairly priced. The puzzle itself looks polished and relaxing, which is exactly the kind of thing I might use to shut my brain off for a few minutes. My hesitation is that free puzzle games often get noisy with offers, boosters, or interruptions, and I do not want that. The store art is clean rather than cluttered, so it earns a trial from me, but the value has to stay honest.
Strong initial fit for polished relaxation, with purchase intent tied to transparent ad-free value and low interruption.I like that it looks polished enough for a relaxing puzzle break.
I would dislike it quickly if the free version relies on constant interruptions.
The store images look cleaner than the busy free-to-play screens I usually avoid.
I would download this as a daily puzzle option because the rules look familiar but slightly different from the match-style games I already know. It seems calm enough for a short evening routine, and the sorting could be satisfying if levels gradually get harder. I am a little cautious about whether it will repeat too quickly or interrupt me with ads. The colored hex pieces and simple touch layout make it look easy to resume without relearning anything.
High fit for routine puzzle play with familiar mechanics, limited by uncertainty around repetition and monetization interruptions.I like that the puzzle looks familiar enough to become a simple routine.
I would lose interest if the levels repeat or the ads break the calm pace.
The colored hex layout looks readable and easy to tap through.
I would try it, but mostly for personal progress rather than competition. The puzzle category fits me, and the colorful boards look like they could make level completion feel satisfying. I would be more interested if there were fair leaderboards or challenge goals, but I do not see enough to assume that. I also would not want daily reward pressure to turn a clean puzzle into another obligation.
Moderate download intent from familiar puzzle appeal and satisfying presentation, with weaker fit for social competition and concern about obligation-based retention.I like that the puzzle boards look satisfying enough to finish and compare progress casually.
I do not see a clear fair competition hook, and I dislike daily pressure.
The colorful completed-board look gives a nice sense of progress.

The game has immediate clarity and social proof, but the sample is skeptical about novelty and free-to-play pressure.
I would probably try it, but it feels more like a quick solo boredom killer than something I would tell friends about. The colors pop and the board is instantly understandable, so the first tap would not feel confusing. What holds me back is that it looks like a familiar sort puzzle, and with ads or in-app purchases I would need the loop to feel really smooth. The big download number helps me trust that it is at least polished enough to test.
The game has immediate clarity and social proof, but the sample is skeptical about novelty and free-to-play pressure.I like that the store presentation makes the puzzle loop look obvious in seconds.
I worry it may feel too generic once the first few levels are over.
The bright tile colors make it look current enough, even if the idea feels familiar.
I would only download this if I wanted a quick puzzle warm-up, not as a main game. The sorting idea could be satisfying if later levels actually require planning, but I do not see much competition or social reason to keep grinding. I also worry that a free puzzle game from this lane could lean on ads between attempts, which would kill the momentum for me. The board looks clean and controlled, so at least the core moves seem like they would be fair rather than messy.
Moderate interest comes from possible planning depth and clean controls, while weak competition and ad risk limit download intent.I like that the board looks clean enough for decisions to feel intentional.
I do not see a strong competitive hook or reason to master it long term.
The tile layout looks easy to parse, which matters if the puzzles get harder.
I would download this for short gaps because it looks like I can understand the move goal almost immediately. It does not need the intensity of an action game, and that is fine if each level gives a quick little solve. My concern is whether it starts fast and lets me pause without losing anything, because I would mostly play it in small moments. The store images show a simple board with clear colored pieces, which makes it seem good for one-handed, no-drama play.
Good fit for short-session mobile play due to readable objectives, with uncertainty around interruptions and pacing.I like that it looks easy to start without studying a complicated screen.
I would be annoyed if ads or slow level starts get in the way of short breaks.
The clean board and simple colors make it look practical for quick play.
I would be on the fence and might skip unless I was specifically in the mood for a polished puzzle snack. The color-slide hook looks clean, but it does not feel especially weird or fresh from the store page. I like small games with personality, and this looks more optimized and mainstream than surprising. The simple hex boards are readable, though, so I would give it a chance if reviews said the later puzzles get clever without a bunch of payment pressure.
Lower intent because the game appears polished but familiar, with possible interest if puzzle depth proves stronger than the store presentation suggests.I like that the puzzle presentation is clean and not visually confusing.
I do not see enough originality or personality to make it a must-download.
The neat hex boards look functional, but not especially distinctive.
I would download this for a low-pressure puzzle break, especially because the color sorting looks soothing and easy to understand right away. It seems like the kind of game I could play while waiting somewhere and still feel like I made a little progress. My worry is that a free puzzle game with ads and purchases might interrupt the calm feeling if it pushes too hard. The big bright hex pieces look readable and satisfying, which makes me more willing to try it.
Strong fit for quick, readable, calming puzzle play, with some concern around ad pressure and limited long-term variety.I like that the puzzle pieces look clean, colorful, and easy to read at a glance.
I am not sure the free-to-play setup will stay relaxing if ads show up too often.
The large hex tiles make the game look approachable instead of fussy.
No segment scores in this group yet.