APP COMRADE

LG / game / BURGER FALL

REVIEW

Burger Fall is a five-minute snack of a webOS game.

Omshy's free LG TV casual game stacks falling burger ingredients with the Magic Remote. The premise is one joke, told with restraint, and it lands for about as long as you'd expect.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

LG

Burger Fall

OMSHY INC.

OUR SCORE

6.4

LG

★ 5.0

PRICE

Free

Burger Fall is exactly what the title implies: ingredients fall, you stack them, the burger grows or topples. That’s the whole game. Omshy Inc. has put a free casual stacker on the LG Content Store with a single mechanic, a single screen, and zero pretense — and on the merits of what it sets out to do, that’s fine.

The Magic Remote is the right input here. Pointing at a moving plate to catch a falling tomato is the kind of micro-interaction LG’s pointer was built for, and the catch-and-stack loop reads cleanly at couch distance on any reasonably modern webOS set. Rounds resolve in under a minute. You’ll play three, then the joke is told.

What Burger Fall lacks is everything past the premise. No progression system, no second mode, no reason to launch it a fourth time. For a free TV-casual game from a small developer in 2026, that’s an acceptable bargain — the install costs nothing, the time investment is bounded, and nothing is trying to upsell you. Treat it as the appetizer it is.

Burger Fall is exactly what the title implies: ingredients fall, you stack them, the burger grows or topples. That's the whole game.

FEATURES

Burger Fall is a free casual stacking game from Omshy Inc., distributed through the LG Content Store for webOS TVs. The Magic Remote drives a horizontally-moving plate or guide while burger components — buns, patties, lettuce, tomato slices, cheese — drop from the top of the screen. Catch them in the right order, build the tallest stack, fail when the tower topples.

Controls are Magic Remote pointer and the OK button. No directional-pad fallback that we found worth mentioning. Sessions are short by design; one round resolves in under a minute, and the loop is restart-and-go.

No account, no leaderboard sync, no cloud progress. Local high score only. Free with no visible ads at install — typical pattern for an LG webOS casual title from a small developer.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The premise is honest. Burger Fall doesn't pretend to be more than a one-joke stacker, and the execution stays inside that frame. Falling ingredients are readable from couch distance, the Magic Remote pointer is the right input for the catch mechanic, and the round length matches a TV-game attention span — you play one while the next episode buffers.

Free and clean. No subscription wall, no daily-rewards calendar, no aggressive ad break between rounds. For an LG TV casual game in 2026, that restraint is the win.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

One mechanic, no progression. There are no unlockable ingredients, no time-attack mode, no two-player couch variant — the kinds of cheap additions that would have given the loop a second hour. Difficulty curves up in a single dimension (faster drops), which is the floor of what a stacker can do.

Presentation is functional rather than charming. The art is flat, the sound design is minimal, and the menus look closer to a webOS template than a designed game. Magic Remote pointer drift on older LG sets makes the catch hitbox feel imprecise on edges — fine on a 2023+ OLED, less fine on a 2019 NanoCell.

CONCLUSION

Install if you want a free, no-commitment TV-game that runs while you wait for the rest of the family to settle on what to watch. Skip if you're looking for anything with depth, narrative, or replay structure. Burger Fall is what casual webOS games should be — small, free, harmless — and what it isn't is anything more than that.