
Recently, the super popular mini game "Synthetic Big Watermelon" has a refreshing feel. Players tap anywhere on the screen to place fruits. When two identical fruits meet together, they will be synthesized into higher-level fruits. Through continuous synthesis, they will eventually synthesize a big watermelon. If the fruit exceeds the boundary line at the top of the screen, the game ends.
Every level of Drop Fruits is a little puzzle box waiting to be cracked open. Clear the board, hit the target, or complete the pattern — the goal changes but the thinking stays sharp. Controls: Mouse and touch both work. Drag to move pieces, click to activate, and look for hints in the level layout itself. Tips to get better: Early levels are practice. Use them to learn the rhythm before the difficulty spikes. Look at what the top scores on leaderboards have in common — it's usually a specific strategy. Check if there's a pause button. Taking five seconds to think often beats reacting on instinct. If you're drawn to games with a drop, fruits flavor, Drop Fruits hits that spot cleanly. Drop Fruits is the kind of game you'll keep open in a tab for weeks.