Six free daily browser games with no account required
One puzzle a day, no login, no app. These six games cover geography, flags, cocktails, colour, logic, and sorting — and they all reset at midnight.
The daily puzzle game genre exploded after Wordle. The problem: almost every imitator tests vocabulary. If words aren't your thing — or you've just burned out on letter grids — the options feel thin.
These six games are different. Each one tests something else: geography, vexillology, drinks knowledge, colour perception, spatial logic, pattern sorting. All free. All daily. None require an account.
DailyGuessr
A street-level panorama drops you somewhere in the world. No map markers, no clues — just what you can see through the lens. You study the landscape, the road signs, the vegetation, the architecture, and make your best guess on a world map.
It's the closest thing to actually being teleported somewhere and having to figure out where you are. The scoring rewards precision: a guess within a few kilometres scores close to the maximum 5,000 points. Miss by a continent and you're starting over tomorrow.
No account. No streak lock-in. Just one location per day, the same one for everyone.
FlagGuessr
A country flag appears — heavily cropped, showing only a fragment. You have five guesses. After each wrong answer the zoom pulls back, revealing more. The fewer guesses you need, the higher your score (up to 10,000 points).
The twist is that flags which look simple are often the hardest. A plain tricolour could be a dozen different countries depending on the exact shades and proportions. FlagGuessr teaches you to look properly.
CocktailGuessr
A photo of a cocktail. No name, no context. You have five guesses, and after each wrong one a new hint unlocks: the glass type, an ingredient, the number of ingredients, the IBA category.
The game covers IBA-recognised cocktails — the international standard used by bartenders worldwide. After a few weeks you'll start reading cocktail photos like a pro. The colour, the garnish, the glass — all of it is a clue.
Palette
A colour swatch appears. Your job: mix red, green, and blue sliders until your colour matches it. The score is based on perceptual distance — how close your eye actually is to the target.
It sounds simple. It isn't. Your brain lies to you constantly about what colours are made of. Palette is the daily game that most consistently surprises people who think they'll be good at it.
No words. No geography. Pure visual perception.
Bloom
A 14×14 grid filled with colours. You pick a corner cell and flood-fill it — the colour spreads to all adjacent matching cells. The goal is to make the entire grid one colour in as few moves as possible.
It's a spatial puzzle that rewards thinking several steps ahead. The daily puzzle is the same for everyone; the score is your move count versus par.
Sortl
Tubes filled with layers of coloured liquid. You pour the top layer from one tube into another — but only onto a matching colour or into an empty tube. The goal is to sort every tube to a single colour in as few moves as possible.
Liquid sort is one of those puzzle formats that feels obvious to understand and genuinely difficult to master. Every move is irreversible mid-round, so planning matters. The daily puzzle scales in difficulty through the week.
What they have in common
All six games share the same structure: one puzzle per day, released at midnight UTC, identical for every player worldwide. No account needed to play or track your streak. No ads. Free forever.
They're made by Stoop — a small independent project. The games are designed to fit into five minutes of your morning without demanding anything more.
If you play one, the others are one click away.