Okay? in IOS

Trivia

Walkthrough, Guilds, Tips on this special game

Our Site Score

85/100

Okay? is a masterclass in 'minimalist' puzzle design. It presents you with a series of geometric shapes and asks you to do one thing: hit them all with a single ball in a single throw. It sounds like a basic physics game, but it quickly evolves into a high-level geometry puzzle that requires you to visualize ricochets like a pro billiard player.

The game is remarkably humble—there are no timers, no forced ads, and the monetization is a 'pay what you want' model. This lack of pressure allows you to truly enter a flow state. The sound design is the secret star here; each shape you hit emits a musical note, and solving a complex level results in a satisfying melodic cascade. It’s the kind of game that is 'Okay' to play for thirty seconds or thirty minutes. It’s elegant, smart, and incredibly polished in its simplicity.

Reviewed on: Fri Feb 27 2026
Dinsun Avatar

Dinsun Review

I usually have no patience for these 'minimalist' indie darlings that substitute actual content for a white background, but Okay? is an exception. It’s a pure mechanics-driven experience. You draw a line, you let go, and you pray to the physics engine. There’s something deeply satisfying about the way the ball pings off a series of triangles to clear a stage in one go. It feels like playing billiards in a modern art museum.

My conservative side hates the 'pay what you want' model because it feels like a plea for charity, but the game is good enough that I actually felt guilty not dropping a few bucks. It doesn’t try to sell you 'power-ups' or 'lives,' which is a refreshing change of pace from the usual mobile rot. It’s not a 'lifestyle game' you’ll play for years, but for a five-minute commute? It’s better than most.

Overall Stats

Pros & Cons

  • Elegant, distraction-free design
  • Satisfying physics and sound design
  • Fair, non-predatory monetization
  • Difficulty spikes can feel arbitrary
  • No real sense of progression beyond 'next level'
  • Can become repetitive in long sessions

Technical Report

Performance: Flawless performance; perfectly optimized for touch controls.

Accessibility:
  • High contrast visuals
  • No time pressure
  • One-handed play

Audience Fit

Buy if: You enjoy geometry, physics, and games that don't shout at you with flashing lights.

Skip if: You need a story, characters, or explosions to stay interested.

Similar Games:
  • Desert Golfing
  • Blek
  • Mini Metro

Reviewer Context

  • Reviewer: Dinsun, puzzle skeptic
  • Hardware: iPhone 13 Mini
  • Playtime: 8 hours
  • Status: Cleared all standard levels

The Game

Available on: iPhone, iPad, iPod

Version 4.13Tue Oct 31 2023

+ Dark Mode


Clear the board. Pay what you want. Okay?

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Requires iOS 11.0 or later. Compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.

Clear the board. Pay what you want. Okay?

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Ratings & Reviews

4.9 out of 5 with 13945 Counts
Age Rating 4+

Screenshots

Okay? screenshot 1Okay? screenshot 2Okay? screenshot 3Okay? screenshot 4Okay? screenshot 5Okay? screenshot 6

Okay? is a thoughtfully designed mobile puzzle game that blends minimalist aesthetics with complex physics. Players aim and manipulate a single ball to influence its path through geometric shapes, solving levels by hitting every object in one sequence. The experience favors experimentation and polish, with simple one-touch controls and satisfyingly melodic feedback for every successful ricochet.

Features

1

Hundreds of minimalist levels

2

Musical feedback and soundscapes

3

Unique 'Pay What You Want' model

4

Interactive level editor for community sharing

Tips

Promotion Videos

OKAY – Website Teaser - YouTube

Related Videos

News on this game

Philipp Stollenmayer is the greatest indie game auteur you've never heard of

A look at the work of Philipp Stollenmayer, an indie game great whose games you might have missed.

Eurogamer.net - Sat Jan 11 2025

Gameplays

Q&A

The game does not have a formal hint system, but replaying the level allows you to see the phantom path of your previous attempt to help you adjust.

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