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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.

Ship Smasher Review: A Free Puzzle Game That's Way Too Addictive
Ship Smasher turns baseball into pure chaos. Smash ships instead of scoring runs in this free strategy puzzler that took me an hour to put down.
Ship Smasher is listed in our Puzzle 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.
The game didn't list specific controls, so honestly I just started clicking everything. Mouse does the heavy lifting here — click to aim, click to smash. Took me a solid five minutes to figure out the angle mechanics because nothing really explains them. Once it clicks though, it clicks.
Ship Smasher takes the basic setup of baseball and completely throws out the rulebook. Instead of scoring runs or caring about bases, your only job is to smash things as hard as possible. The original description cuts off mid-sentence but that's pretty much the whole pitch — chaotic destruction dressed up as a puzzle game with some strategy layered in. Anyone who likes games where you can zone out but still feel smart will probably enjoy this. If you need hand-holding or a clear storyline, skip it. There's no tutorial to speak of and the game just kind of drops you in.
If you need a break from smashing ships, Sprunkful is a chill music game that uses the same browser platform.
A typical round takes maybe three to five minutes once you know what you're doing. Early on, expect to spend closer to ten minutes per level while you figure out the physics. Each stage gives you ships to smash and you've got to figure out the right angle and timing to actually connect. My biggest mistake early on was treating it like actual baseball — trying to aim for specific targets instead of just going for maximum destruction. Wasted a good twenty minutes on level four before I realized the game rewards chaos over precision. The difficulty spikes pretty hard around level eight and I had to replay it three times.
For something simpler after Ship Smasher's tougher levels, Space Aim Kids is a low-stress clicker worth trying.
Baseball mechanics flipped into pure destruction — no scoring runs here
15 levels that ramp up in difficulty pretty quickly
Physics-based puzzles that actually require some thought
No tutorial, which is either refreshing or frustrating depending on your patience
Free to play in your browser with zero downloads needed
Each level takes 3-10 minutes depending on how stuck you get
Don't bother aiming precisely for the first few levels — just smash and learn the physics
The difficulty wall around level 8 is real, so replay earlier levels to get a feel for angles
Don't ignore the smaller ships — they're worth more points than you'd think
If a level feels impossible, you're probably overthinking it. Less strategy, more swinging
I replayed level 4 like an idiot before realizing the game rewards destruction over accuracy
When you want a completely different vibe from puzzle games, Sprunki OC V3 lets you mess around with music creation.
Common questions about Ship Smasher
There are 15 levels total. The first five are basically warm-ups, then things get genuinely tricky around level eight.
Not at all. The baseball theme is just window dressing — the actual gameplay is pure physics puzzle with smashing. You could hate baseball and still enjoy this.
Progress saves automatically in your browser. Close the tab and come back later, you'll pick up where you left off. Just don't clear your cache.
No strict timer, but there's usually an optimal number of moves. The game tracks how efficiently you smash things, so there's replay value if you care about scores.
The game suddenly expects you to use everything you've learned at once. Ships start moving and the angles get less forgiving. It's rough but fair once you figure out the pattern.
Officially it's listed as desktop only. I tried it on my phone and the controls were a mess — wouldn't recommend it.
Last reviewed: April 2026 / Reviewed by Claw AI Game
Ship Smasher turns baseball into pure chaos. Smash ships instead of scoring runs in this free strategy puzzler that took me an hour to put down.
Ship Smasher occupies a weird niche that's part puzzle, part stress relief. Compared to other physics games it's lighter on strategy but way more satisfying when you land a good hit. What it lacks in polish it makes up for in that primal urge to just break stuff. Worse games have charged money for less entertainment.