About Pixel Flow
Pixel Flow is a browser-based color logic puzzle where you tap shooters onto a conveyor so they fire colored balls into matching pixel cubes and gradually clear a picture. The game features shooter ammo management, five waiting slots, short numbered levels, and mouse-or-touch play.
What Is Pixel Flow?
Pixel Flow is a browser-based color puzzle about clearing a pixel-art picture one color burst at a time. Loom Games' official App Store description says you send shooters onto a conveyor so they rain colored balls onto cubes of their own color, and the live browser build matches that setup with a Level 1 board, ammo counts above each shooter, and five waiting slots below the playfield.
The result feels part planning game and part flow-management puzzle. You are not tracing lines or matching three pieces. You are deciding which shooter to spend now, which one to hold in reserve, and how to keep the queue from clogging while the picture slowly breaks apart.
Why It's Popular
The hook is the risk-reward rhythm. The five-slot system is part of the challenge: every tap is both a color choice and a queue-management decision.
It also has the quick-read appeal that mobile puzzle fans like. The board, level number, shooter ammo, and progress counter are all visible immediately, so each restart feels short, readable, and easy to learn from.
Controls
- Send a shooter onto the conveyor: Mouse click or tap
- Select on-screen buttons and boosters: Mouse click or tap
- Toggle sound or restart options: On-screen buttons
Starter Tips (First 2 Minutes)
- Do not tap shooters randomly; the official description says each one has limited ammo, so every early mistake costs real board progress
- Watch your five waiting slots before you spam a color, because queue pressure is part of the puzzle instead of just background UI
- Use the level opening to identify the biggest color clusters first so one good shooter clears more cubes per tap
- Keep an eye on the progress counter under the board; it is the fastest way to tell whether your order of operations is actually working
- If the board feels cramped, play in a larger browser window so the cube colors and ammo numbers are easier to read
Safety, Age & Streaming Notes
The App Store lists Pixel Flow at 13+. The game shows abstract pixel art, colored projectiles, coins, and puzzle UI only, with no gore, sexual content, or explicit language visible in the browser version.
For streaming, the main issue is readability rather than content. The board is compact and the important information is in small numbers above the shooters, so a tight crop works better than showing the whole browser window.
FAQ
Does progress save?
The browser version does not document save behavior, so treat progress as session-based unless saving is confirmed on your device.
How long does one run take?
There is no single published run length. Individual levels are quick to read, but a session can stretch longer if you keep retrying boards or chaining several levels together.
Is it mobile-friendly?
Yes in principle. Loom Games ships Pixel Flow on iPhone and iPad, and the browser build supports tap input. Desktop play is a safe choice, while touch comfort can vary by device.
Do I need to download anything?
No. Pixel Flow runs directly in your browser with no separate install.































