Unpuzzle presents a tightly packed arrangement of blocks with one goal marked as your target — and the only way out is to clear every piece pinning it in place, in exactly the right sequence. It sounds simple until you actually study the layout and realize that removing the wrong piece first doesn't just fail to help, it can lock the remaining blocks into a configuration with no valid moves left at all. The whole game lives in that tension between "this piece looks free to remove" and "this piece is secretly load-bearing for three other moves you'll need later."
Click or tap a block to remove it, provided its path out of the structure is currently unobstructed by neighboring pieces — a block wedged against others on every open side simply can't be pulled yet. The objective is to work through the entire structure until the target block has a clear path free, at which point the level resolves. Because later blocks depend on earlier ones being gone, the real task isn't spotting one obvious first move — it's mentally simulating two or three removals ahead to make sure the order you're choosing doesn't strand a block you'll need to clear afterward.
Before removing anything, trace the full shape of the structure and identify which blocks are only touching the target from one side — those are usually safe early removals since they rarely gate other pieces. Save any block that borders multiple neighbors for later in your sequence, since removing it too early can seal off paths you haven't used yet. If a level stalls with no legal moves remaining, that's a signal to restart and rethink your very first pick rather than hunting for a move that isn't there. Slow down on denser layouts — the puzzles that look the most cluttered are usually the ones where a rushed first click costs you the whole attempt.
Unpuzzle's stripped-down, sequence-dependent logic sits well next to other patient thinking games on Machita 66, like Brain Dozer for physical stacking puzzles and Block Blast for a faster-paced spatial challenge. When you're ready for more slow-burn logic puzzles, the full games library has plenty more to work through.