SORTY BOLTY: Nuts, Bolts, Color Groups, and Extra Space
SORTY BOLTY is a color-coordination puzzle where players move nuts between bolts, use hints carefully, and build clean same-color stacks.
What the game asks
SORTY BOLTY revolves around sorting vibrant nuts onto corresponding bolts. You tap or click a bolt to select a nut, then choose another bolt of the same color or an empty bolt as the destination. The goal is to organize the board into correct color groups.
This is a familiar sorting idea with a mechanical look. The challenge is space. Empty bolts are valuable because they let you temporarily move nuts while uncovering the colors below. If every bolt is filled with mixed colors, the puzzle becomes much harder.
The game includes helpful options such as undoing a move and adding an extra bolt, but those are most useful when used deliberately.
How to sort well
Start by finding colors that are already close to complete. If two or three nuts of the same color can be gathered safely, finish that stack early. A completed bolt simplifies the rest of the board.
Before moving a nut, check what will appear underneath. Revealing the right color can create the next move. Revealing a color with no destination may make the puzzle tighter.
Use empty bolts as staging areas, not storage closets. A temporary move should help another color move soon.
Hints and recovery
Undo is useful when a move clearly made the board worse. Do not treat it as a substitute for thinking; use it to learn why the move failed. The extra bolt is powerful because it creates space, so save it for levels where the board is genuinely jammed.
On mobile, tapping bolts is quick, but move slowly enough to avoid sending a nut to the wrong stack. On desktop, the larger layout helps you see buried colors.
A good recovery plan usually starts by freeing one bolt rather than fixing every stack at once. Once a bolt becomes empty, the whole board gains flexibility, and colors that looked locked can move again.
Better route choices
The mistake to fix first is starting too many color stacks at once. Another is filling the only empty bolt with a nut that cannot move again soon. Players may also ignore the top-to-bottom order of each bolt, even though hidden colors decide future moves.
If a level feels stuck, look for the color with the clearest path to completion and rebuild around it.
Best kind of player
SORTY BOLTY suits players who enjoy nuts-and-bolts themes, color sorting, calm logic, and careful space management. It is a good browser game for relaxed puzzle sessions.
Players looking for action or narrative progression will likely want something else; the session works through methodical organization.
What makes it distinct
The game earns attention because SORTY BOLTY is easiest to understand through same-color moves, empty bolt value, undo, extra space, and buried-color planning. This gives visitors the real challenge.