Kitchen Star’s rotating line boards and kitchen silhouettes
In Kitchen Star, each stage gives you a broken line drawing of a dish or kitchen item, and you rotate the connected segments until the outline matches again. The hook is the blueprint-style art: the pieces stay readable even when they are offset, so you are tracing curves, corners, and handles instead of guessing blindly.
This fits neatly under logic puzzles, and the kitchen theme makes the clue-reading even clearer. A pan, plate, bowl, or dessert outline is easier to spot when you treat the board like a visual puzzle, which is why it also overlaps with cooking games. No signup or download is needed, so you can test a level in your browser in seconds.
Fewer rotations mean a better score
The score pushes you to finish in as few moves as possible, so the best approach is to read the whole silhouette before you start turning pieces. When two fragments share a straight edge or a smooth curve, that detail usually tells you the correct orientation, and strong attention to small line breaks pays off. Because every board asks you to compare shapes rather than rush, it sits well with educational puzzles that train pattern recognition.
The rotation buttons at the bottom keep the controls simple: press the direction you need, watch the fragments spin, and use the remaining linework as a guide. If a level has a round rim or a long handle, that shape can anchor the whole solve. You can play it on mobile and desktop in a browser, making Kitchen Star an easy pick when you want a quick spatial challenge with no signup.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
28 june 2024
Last Update
28 june 2024