Space Pet Link
Mahjong Real
Mahjong Shanghai Dynasty
Pixel Cat Mahjong
Balls Animal
Bubble Shooter HD
Butterfly Shimai
Water Sort 2025
Dream Pet Link
Flower Jam
Back to Santaland: Winter Holidays
Monster Go
Patchworkz!
Glory Chef
Daily Guess
Circus Bubbles
Gold Rush - Treasure Hunt
Bubble Shooter 2020
Pool Bubbles Html5
Memory Mahjong
Water Flow
Mahjong Connect Deluxe
Merge Block Raising
Tile Guru: Match Fun
Number Bubble Shooter
Hex Triple Match
Good Sort Master: Triple Match
Puzzle Wood Block
Annalynn MD
Hexadice
Bus Escape: Clear Jam
Bubble Pop Adventures
Jungle Legend
Kris Mahjong Remastered
Wood Block Puzzle
Dark Mahjong Connect
Treasures of the Mystic Sea
Master Qwan's Mahjongg
1001 Arabian Nights
Mage's Secret
Shell Challenge
Gummy Blocks
Classic Mahjong Deluxe
Matching Pattern
Harvest Day Mahjong 3D
Icecream Factory
Mahjong Connect Remastered
Cute Monster Bubble Shooter
Pool Shooter Pro
Oceanscapes: Secrets of the Lost Treasures
Cooking Tile
Vega Mix 2
Line 98
Xmas Mahjong Trio Solitaire
Rope Sorting
Supermarket Sort and Match
Link Animal Puzzle
The Sort Agency
Queen of Mahjong
Bubble Blitz
The Sorting Mart
Clear the Numbers
Catch Capybara
Find Match 3D
Zen Master
Butterfly Kyodai Mahjong
Kitchen Mahjong Classic
Golden Autumn Mahjong
Mahjong Impossible
Mahjong Cards
Bubble Tower 3D
Kingdom Mess
These are simple games where the mechanic is to find items that share the same color or design. Select one item and try to find the matching element to create a pair or in some games a match of three or more. The challenge is to use your memory to where hidden items are placed and to use planning in more advanced matching games to complete levels within the given time. Matching games require searching visually in many cases to locate similar items. Thus matching games are objective as there should always be a clear solution in a good matching game.
The history of matching games goes back to first know game element, the dice. Dice were used to derive the Domino game's white and black tiles. The match three games.
These tiles and their paper card counterparts were likely the first source of matching games. They would have been turned face down and the goal would have been to find matching tiles, flipping them right side up, two at a time. In the event a match is not found, the player would need to recall where tiles were located to correctly find all matching pairs.