Triple Match City
Ferah Games
Screenshots



About this app
Triple Match City mixes a frantic timer with low-key snoop work: scan crowded scenes, collect small items, and group them in threes before the clock yells at you. Maps jump from neon city streets to dusty deserts and frosty outposts—each one packs dozens of tiny things to spot. Controls are swipe-and-zoom; hints help when your eyes betray you (yes, that happened to me at 2 a.m.). Progression adds tougher layouts and occasional time squeezes, while boosters speed you up if you’re willing to pay. The game is free to start, gets updated with new maps, and is easy to pick up for a five-minute break or a full-on scavenger binge.
Editor's Review
I downloaded this on a whim and—no lie—lost two late-night hours searching for a stupid rubber duck. That’s both the charm and the trap. The gameplay is simple: spot tiny, oddly placed items and combine them in threes to clear space. Short rounds. Sharp clocks. Short bursts of panic. The zoom works well (actually useful—thank you), and hints are forgiving but not handed out like candy. Levels ramp up with sneaky placement and busier art; I got legitimately stuck on a late map and had to use three hints in a row (embarrassing, but real). Ads pop between rounds unless you opt out, and some boosters feel priced a little steep for what they do—don’t expect to breeze through without spending if you’re chasing leaderboards. Still—this one scratches the itch for quick, focused play sessions. It’s not perfect, but it’s oddly addictive. Play it on a commute or when you need your brain’s eye muscles exercised.
Pros
- Zoom tool actually helps you spot tiny details—no pixel hunting for hours.
- Wide variety of themed maps keeps levels from blending together.
- Hints are generous enough to prevent rage quits but still cost you something.
- Short, replayable rounds fit quick sessions or long binges.
Cons
- Interlevel ads can break the flow unless you pay them off.
- Difficulty spikes later—expect some levels to feel unfairly tight on time.
- Pricey booster packs that don’t always justify the spend.
Additional Information
You May Also Like