Make It Perfect 2
Rating 4.5star icon
  • 5M+

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  • I am Curt

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  • Puzzle

    Category

  • Everyone 10+

    Content Rating

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editor reviews

Make It Perfect 2 is a hyper-casual puzzle game that I stumbled upon while browsing the Google Play Store on my Android phone, and honestly, it's been a surprisingly addictive time sink. This is purely a mobile game—you won't find it on Steam, Xbox, or Switch—and it first launched back in 2021. Since then, it's racked up over 50 million installs on Google Play alone, and it's also available in the Apple App Store. The best part? It's completely free to download and play. Like many games in this genre on Android, it supports itself through in-app ads, but you can play through a bunch of levels before you even see one. If you want to remove ads permanently, there's a small one-time purchase, usually around two or three dollars. That's a fair trade-off for a game that doesn't shove microtransactions down your throat every five seconds.

So how do you actually play this thing? It's dead simple. You're given a messy, asymmetrical object—like a twisted piece of wire, a shattered plate, or a crooked picture frame. Your job is to drag your finger across the screen to shave off the rough edges until the object becomes perfectly symmetrical. Think of it like digital whittling; you're polishing an ugly rock into a gem. The best part of the game for me is the tactile feedback. Every scrape and cut is followed by a satisfying “knock” sound effect, and watching that red, uneven silhouette turn into a clean, mirrored shape is oddly therapeutic. My favorite part, though, has to be the “bonus fix” levels. After you perfect the main object, you get a cracked or broken version of the same item and have to drag puzzle pieces back into place. It mixes up the gameplay just enough to keep things fresh after you've installed the app and played for twenty minutes straight.

Compared to other casual puzzle games on Android, Make It Perfect 2 carves out a nice niche for itself. Games like “I Love Hue” or “Zen Pinball” offer relaxation, but they don't give you that same manual, hands-on crafting feel. “I Love Hue” is about sorting colors, which is chill but passive. Here, you're actively destroying and rebuilding things, which is way more engaging to me. Another similar game, “Perfect Slices,” focuses on cutting objects, which is close, but that game feels more like a frantic wave-based challenge. Make It Perfect 2 is slower, more meditative. It lets you zoom in, take your time, and enjoy the process of creating order out of chaos. That's why I keep coming back to it when I've got five minutes to kill during my commute—it's low-pressure, no time limit, and I get to transform junk into art. If you like puzzle games where the reward is the process itself, not just a high score, definitely give this download a shot.

features

  • Precision Shaving Mechanic 🌀 – Unlike games like “Draw a Line” or “Perfect Slices,” this one lets you manually shave off material bit by bit. You aren't just tapping or swiping a predetermined path; you have full control over how much you remove. If you cut too far, you can even add material back with a rewind button. That kind of fine control makes every level feel like a real craftsmanship challenge, not just a reflex test.
  • Bonus Puzzle Mode 🧩 – After you finish a shaving level, you unlock a secondary phase where you drag broken fragments back into place to restore the object. This is a clever twist because it changes the dynamic. Instead of removing, you're now adding and aligning. It keeps the core gameplay loop from getting stale, which is a problem I've seen in other hyper-casual puzzle games on Google Play that only rely on one action.
  • Relaxing Sound Design 🎵 – The audio in this app is a standout feature. Each scrape, knock, and click is crisp and satisfying. There's no annoying background music that loops after ten seconds. It's just pure, natural sound effects that make the process feel meditative. Games like “Zen Koi” might be visually peaceful, but this game's audio feedback is more rewarding because it directly responds to your touch input.

pros

  • Stress-Free No Timer ⏳ – A huge strength over games like “Fruit Ninja” or “Temple Run” is the complete absence of a timer. You can sit there for ten minutes carefully shaving a single edge if you want. It makes the game perfect for winding down after a long day, especially on Android where you can just pause it and come back later without losing progress.
  • Great Replayability via Level Variety 🔄 – There are over a hundred levels, and each object is unique. You go from fixing a broken heart to straightening a crooked fence post. Compared to “Cut the Rope,” which has multiple levels but repeating mechanics, Make It Perfect 2 keeps things fresh by constantly introducing new shapes and asymmetries. I've downloaded the app twice on different phones just to replay the early levels because they feel different each time.
  • Affordable Ad Removal 💰 – The in-app purchase to remove ads is just a couple of dollars. For a free game with 50 million installs, that's a steal. In contrast, many Google Play puzzle games like “Gardenscapes” will nickel-and-dime you with $10 boosters. Here, you pay once and never see an ad again. That's real value for money.

cons

  • Repetitive Core Loop After 50 Levels 🔁 – Even though the shapes change, the core action of shaving edges doesn't evolve much after the first hour. Games like “Monument Valley” offer new mechanics every few levels, but Make It Perfect 2 sticks with the same two actions (shave and assemble) throughout. After you've installed the app and played through 50 levels, it starts to feel a bit like a chore rather than a puzzle.
  • Occasional Unmotivated Ads 🚫 – While the ad frequency is generally low, sometimes an interstitial video will pop up right when you're starting a new level. It's not as aggressive as free-to-play games like “Subway Surfers,” but it can break the zen flow. Games like “Mekorama” handle ad-free experiences better by offering them only on an optional basis for hints.
  • Limited Challenge for Experienced Gamers 🎯 – If you're coming from complex puzzle games on Switch or Steam like “The Witness” or “Baba Is You,” this will feel very shallow. There's no fail state, no score attack, and no speedrun mode. It's purely a relaxation tool. So if you're looking for a mental workout, this isn't it. It's more like a digital fidget spinner than a real puzzle game.

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