Water Sort Puzzle Solver

Stuck on a water sort puzzle? Enter your tubes and get the exact pours to finish the level — following real water sort rules, where each pour moves the whole run of one color.

Real pouring rules Instant solutions Pour-by-pour playback

Pick a color below, then click a tube to drop balls in bottom to top — copy them exactly as they appear in your level. Pick the eraser to remove a tube's top ball.

How to use the water sort solver

  1. Set up the tubes. Choose the number of colors, units per tube (4 in most water sort games), and how many empty tubes your level has.
  2. Enter each tube bottom-to-top. Treat every band of liquid as one unit. A tube that is half red then half blue (top) is entered as red, red, blue, blue.
  3. Solve and pour along. Each step tells you which tube to pour into which — ×2 / ×3 means that many units move in one pour, exactly like the game does it.

More sorting tools

Ball sort levels

Balls move one at a time, not in runs — use the ball sort puzzle solver for those levels.

Other color sort games

Hoops, nuts & bolts, blocks — the color sort solver covers one-piece-at-a-time variants.

Take a break

Play our free ball sort game — unlimited solver-verified levels right in your browser.

Water sort solver FAQ

How is a water sort solver different from a ball sort solver?

In water sort puzzles a pour moves the entire run of same-colored liquid at the top of a tube (as much as fits), not just one unit. This solver follows those pouring rules, so its solutions match what actually happens in water sort games.

Does it work for levels with hidden or unknown colors?

Not yet — every unit must be visible to solve. If your level hides colors, play until they are revealed, then enter the position. An interactive unknown-colors mode is on our roadmap.

Which water sort games does it solve?

Any standard water/liquid sort puzzle: Water Sort Puzzle style apps, color water sorting browser games, and similar tube-pouring games with 4 or 5 units per tube and 1–3 empty tubes.

Why does the solver pour several units in one step?

Because that's how water sort works — a pour always moves the whole top run of one color if it fits. Steps marked ×2 or ×3 mean that many units move in that single pour.