
Horse Magnifier is a minimalist visual puzzle game where you reposition circular lenses to fix distorted horse silhouettes. Unlike many traditional puzzle games (like match-3 or logic grids), this game feels more like solving an optical illusion—even a tiny adjustment can completely change the outcome.
No timer, but later levels become surprisingly tricky.
This is where the game shifts from casual to a true visual challenge.
1. Fix the “core body” first, not the details
At first, I tried aligning the head immediately—and kept failing. The correct approach: align the torso and back first, since they define the overall proportions.
2. Lenses are hints, not solutions
It’s tempting to “force-fit” shapes using lenses. In reality, lenses help you see distortion, not solve it directly.
3. If the head looks wrong, the problem started earlier
A common mistake I ran into:
Slightly off head alignment → tried micro-adjustments. But the real issue was the body alignment from the beginning.
4. Step back and look at the full silhouette
There’s no Zoom feature, so I found this helpful: Physically look at the screen from a bit farther away
This makes it easier to spot proportion issues.
5. Space matters more than you think
At first, I only focused on the horse shape itself.
The real key: check the spacing around the silhouette
Horse Magnifier isn’t for players who want quick wins. But if you enjoy visual problem-solving and optical illusions, it delivers a short, unique, and surprisingly memorable experience.
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