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What we checked
We look at loading behavior, control clarity, whether the game works without an install, and whether the core loop is understandable without hunting for instructions elsewhere.

Sprunki Kick the Buddy with Mr. Sun — Free Stress-Buster Game
Poke, drag, and mess with a goofy animated sun and his little flames. The sound effects every time you interact honestly cracked me up more than once.
Sprunki Kick the Buddy but with Mr. Sun is listed in our Casual collection because it passed a basic playability review: it loads in a modern browser, explains itself quickly, and offers a clear reason to keep playing after the first attempt.
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We look at loading behavior, control clarity, whether the game works without an install, and whether the core loop is understandable without hunting for instructions elsewhere.
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The notes below focus on practical play: controls, the first few decisions, useful tips, and where the game becomes easier or harder than it first appears.
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If the embedded game stops loading, changes its controls, adds misleading steps, or receives repeated player reports, we update the page or remove the listing.
Pretty much all mouse stuff here. Click and drag Mr. Sun around the screen, poke him, or grab one of those little flames orbiting him. Took me a sec to figure out you can actually fling him into the walls — that's where the real fun kicks in. Nice thing is you only need the mouse. No weird keyboard combos to remember. Just click, drag, and watch the chaos happen. Bobo here spent a solid twenty minutes just tossing Mr. Sun around before realizing there were more tools to mess with.
So this is basically a sandbox toy where you have this big animated sun character — Mr. Sun — hanging out surrounded by these tiny flames. And your job is kinda just... to mess with him. Poke him, throw things at him, drag him around. It's got that same vibe as those old ragdoll sandbox games but with a way goofier look. The sound design is what got me. Every time you interact with Mr. Sun or those little flames, you get these quirky rhythmic sounds that honestly made me laugh. Turns out the rhythm tags aren't lying — there's something musical about the chaos you create. Not gonna pretend this is some deep experience though. If you need goals or progression, this won't do it for you. But for just zoning out and causing cartoon mayhem? Pretty much hits the spot.
If you enjoy this style, Urban Echo is worth a look too.
A typical session goes like this — you load in, see Mr. Sun floating there with his little flame buddies, and start poking around. First thing I did was click on him. He made this goofy noise and bounced off the wall. That's it. That hooked me. You grab different tools from the side — nothing complicated, just point and click. Each one does something different to Mr. Sun. The flame interactions are probably my favorite part. You can scatter them everywhere and watch them slowly drift back. A round doesn't really have a set length since there's no timer or anything. I usually play for about ten minutes before my lunch break ends. That said, honestly, this part bugged me — after maybe fifteen minutes you've kinda seen most of what the tools do. The novelty wears off a bit. But those first ten minutes? Pure stress relief. Caught myself grinning like an idiot at my screen more than once.
For something a bit more structured but still chill, give Paty Path a try.
Mr. Sun and his little flames are actually pretty expressive — the animations sell the whole thing
Sound effects tie into the rhythm thing surprisingly well, each hit feels like a beat
Sandbox freedom means no pressure, no timers, just mess around however you want
Desktop only for now, which kinda stinks if you wanted phone play
The humor works — it's dumb in the best way, like a digital stress ball
Tool variety is decent but some feel kinda same-y after a while
Honestly the replay value drops off after you've tried everything once or twice
Try flinging Mr. Sun at different speeds — the sound changes and it's way more satisfying
Don't skip messing with the small flames, they actually have their own reactions
Play with sound on. Half the fun is the audio and you'll miss it otherwise
Don't do what Bobo did and ignore the tool menu for ten minutes — there's more than just dragging
Short sessions work best. Five to ten minutes hits the sweet spot before things get repetitive
Try combining tools quickly one after another for a mini rhythm combo thing
If you're feeling stressed, the simple poking is honestly the most therapeutic part
When you want another easygoing time-killer, Jumen scratches that same itch.
Common questions about Sprunki Kick the Buddy but with Mr. Sun
Doesn't look like it right now. It's desktop only, which is a bummer. Would honestly be perfect for mobile with touch controls.
No ending, no levels, no win condition. Pure sandbox. You just mess with Mr. Sun until you're done. Some people love that freedom, others might find it aimless.
That's basically the ideal playtime. Load up, smack Mr. Sun around for a bit, close it. No commitment needed. My go-to for waiting in line when I have my laptop.
The sounds that play when you interact with Mr. Sun and the flames have this rhythmic quality to them. It's not a rhythm game exactly, but the audio feedback has a beat-like feel that's pretty cool.
Cartoon slapstick at most. Mr. Sun bounces around and makes funny faces. Think of it like those old flash games where you ragdoll a character. Nothing graphic.
From what I can tell, not really. Each time you load it, fresh start. Since there's no progression system though, it doesn't matter much.
Should be fine. Nothing scary or inappropriate. The humor is goofy and slapsticky. Kids would probably get a kick out of flinging Mr. Sun around more than adults would.
Last reviewed: April 2026 / Reviewed by Bobo
Poke, drag, and mess with a goofy animated sun and his little flames. The sound effects every time you interact honestly cracked me up more than once.
Bobo's been playing this during bus waits all week. It's not trying to be anything more than a silly time-killer, and that's exactly why it works for those in-between moments. You don't need to learn mechanics or stress about failing. Just load it up, poke a sun, and zone out. If you want something with real challenge or a story that pulls you in, this ain't it. The repetition kicks in faster than I'd like. But for unwinding after an annoying meeting or killing ten minutes before your food arrives? Hard to beat something this brainless and fun. The rhythmic sound stuff adds just enough flavor to keep it from feeling totally empty.