Click X

Click X

bin ming

4.71,000,000+ downloads259MB

Screenshots

Click X screenshot 1
Click X screenshot 2
Click X screenshot 3

About this app

Click X is a tile-matching puzzle built for phones and tablets that keeps things simple on purpose: big tiles, plain rules, and no ticking clock. You tap (or slide) two identical free tiles to clear them. Repeat until the board is empty. That’s it. The UI is roomy—good for older eyes—and there are hundreds of levels that slowly add little twists: special tiles that behave oddly, combo rewards when you chain matches, and a Mind Training mode that nudges you toward pattern memory exercises. "How do I clear that corner?" "Try the hint or shuffle—don't be shy." Yes, this is meant to be relaxing. No, it won't hold your hand through every puzzle. There are free hints, an undo, and an occasional shuffle, but the game still expects you to think (and sometimes suffer) a bit. Offline play works as advertised; I took it on a subway with zero bars and still finished puzzles. The design keeps things readable: larger fonts, high-contrast tiles, and spaced layouts so fat fingers don't curse you mid-match. A pause here — it's not flawless. Some special tiles act like plot twists (you'll understand when you hit them), and replay feels a bit repetitive after long sessions. If you want flashy animations or scoreboards that scream at you, this isn't that. If you want a quiet, deliberate puzzle break that respects slower reflexes and tired eyes, this might be exactly what you need. I inferred a few things from the store description—like how boosters recharge and whether there are in-app purchases—so if you care about no-fee guarantees, double-check the app page. But if your goal is straightforward: match pairs, clear boards, and keep the brain active without pressure, Click X delivers a tidy, low-drama experience.

Editor's Review

I downloaded Click X on a rainy night because my brain wanted noise-free pressing. I expected the usual: repetitive boards and a nagging ad every other level. Was I wrong? Not entirely. But I was pleasantly pulled in. I got stuck on one layout for nearly two hours (yes, two—my hand cramped, real sweat), and that felt good. Frustration, then small victory. No timer. No leaderboard breathing down my neck. Just me and those tiles. The special tiles add flavor—some behave like little gremlins—and that kept me guessing. "Use a hint?" my wife asked (she was scrolling memes). "Nope. Not yet," I mumbled. The UX is intentionally plain: large tiles, clear contrast, simple controls. That's the win for older players or anyone fed up with tiny icons. But here's the real talk—there's a sameness after long runs. Levels recycle patterns. Shuffle helps, but don't expect miracles. Also, store details on boosters felt a bit vague to me (are there paywalls? maybe—check the in-app section). Ads weren't brutal in my sessions, but I wouldn't call them invisible either. Would I recommend it? For casual players, absolutely. For power puzzlers looking for endless novelty, maybe not. I liked that it forced me to slow down—sometimes that’s the whole point. The game didn't hold my hand, and I liked that too.

Pros

  • Large, readable tiles and fonts—easy on the eyes on both phone and tablet
  • Offline play means no Wi‑Fi required for long commutes
  • Simple controls (tap or slide) that work well for older hands
  • Helpful boosters available: hints, undo, and shuffle when you’re stuck

Cons

  • Patterns and layouts can feel repetitive after extended play
  • Some special tile behaviors are confusing at first and lack clear tutorials
  • Booster/monetization details are not fully spelled out in the description

Additional Information

Updated2026/3/6
Version1.11.6
Size259MB
Downloads1,000,000+
Categoryboard
Developerbin ming

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