A skill-only tap arcade in the colours of a Lahore evening. Pieces swing on a crane chain — tap to drop them and align them perfectly on the tower below. Stay sharp: every misaligned drop trims the next piece smaller.
play_arrow Play NowSix honest, simple reasons Tower Rush Game is a fun ten minutes (and a stubborn afternoon if you let it).
Every floor swings horizontally on the crane chain. One tap drops it. One tap to start the next round. Your phone is your entire control pad.
Land a piece exactly aligned with the floor below and the trim is skipped. Three perfect drops in a row earns back a sliver of lost width.
The swing gets a little faster every five floors and the camera scrolls up to keep the tower in frame. Easy to learn, steadily tougher to keep going.
Sandstone havelis, sunset coral domes, jade green minarets and cream stone floors cycle as you climb — every five floors gets its own band of colour.
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Minaret silhouettes, a crescent moon and a sandstone sunset sit behind every round. A small homage to Walled City evenings on a 4:3 canvas.
Five hand-drawn icons borrowed from Pakistani heritage architecture — they appear on the stack, the skyline silhouette and the rules page.
Four small steps. Then it is just you and the swing.
A fresh floor swings left and right on the crane chain. Track its rhythm.
Anywhere on the stage works. The piece falls straight down onto the tower.
Overhang is trimmed away. Tiny mistakes shrink the floor; a clean drop keeps it full.
Miss the tower entirely and the round ends. Beat your best floor count next time.
Tower Rush Game: Sky Stack is set on an imagined evening lot somewhere just outside the Walled City. A row of cusped Mughal arches and two minaret spires sit on the far horizon while a single yellow-and-black hazard-striped crane swings a haveli over the build site.
The palette borrows from the colours you actually see at sunset there: the deep teal of late-evening sky, the sandstone cream of Walled City walls, the coral terracotta of clay-tile roofs and the deep flag-green of mosque domes.
None of that is a casino backdrop. The whole experience is one quiet skill challenge — tap, drop, align — built around our affection for the way Old Lahore looks when the call to maghrib rolls over the rooftops.
One stage. One crane. One swinging piece at a time. No installs, no sign-up.
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