LG / game / TOWER MASTER
REVIEW
Tower Master is a serviceable webOS time-killer that doesn't ask much.
Inlogic's casual stacking game ports a familiar one-tap mobile mechanic to LG's Magic Remote — fine for a few minutes between shows, thinner than a phone-based equivalent.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
Tower Master
INLOGIC SOFTWARE S.R.O.
OUR SCORE
5.5
LG
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Tower Master is one of the small casual games that fills out LG’s webOS store between the streaming apps and the cloud-gaming portals — a free stacking game from Slovak studio Inlogic that asks exactly one thing of you and asks it well. Press the Magic Remote button at the right moment, the block lands flush, the tower grows. Press it late, the block hangs over the edge, the overhang gets sliced off, the next block is narrower, and the run ends a few drops later when there’s nothing left to land on.
There is no campaign here, no unlocks, no narrative excuse for the geometry. The pleasure, such as it is, is the one-button rhythm — and the question every TV-port casual game has to answer is whether that rhythm earns the living-room context. Tower Master mostly doesn’t. It runs, it’s free, it doesn’t try to sell you anything, and on those terms it’s a perfectly honest install.
What it isn’t is a reason to put down the phone. The mechanic was designed for thirty-second mobile sessions, and putting it on a 65-inch OLED with a pointer remote doesn’t make it deeper — it just makes the gap between the format and the screen more visible. Worth the install slot if you want a free pick-up-and-play game on the TV; not worth seeking out.
Tower Master is the kind of TV-store game that exists because casual ports fill webOS shelves, not because anyone needed it on a 65-inch screen.
FEATURES
Tower Master is a one-input stacking game from Slovak casual-games studio Inlogic, ported to LG webOS as a free download. The mechanic is the long-running mobile-store template — a moving block slides above a tower, you press to drop it, and any overhang gets sliced off. Stack as high as possible without the column collapsing to nothing.
The webOS build maps the single input to the Magic Remote click. Pointer-hover and ThinQ voice search aren't really used — this is a game that wants one button and uses one button. Sessions end the moment you misjudge a drop, so a run is anywhere from ten seconds to a couple of minutes.
No accounts, no leaderboards visible inside the app, no progression beyond a local high score. Free with no in-app purchases, which is unusual for the genre on phones — Inlogic's TV builds typically ship as straight ad-free freeware.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
It loads fast and it works. For a casual webOS title that's not nothing — plenty of TV-store games take ten seconds to launch and feel laggy on the click-to-drop input. Tower Master responds immediately, which is the entire game.
Pricing is honest. Free, no ads mid-run, no subscription nag, no upsell screen. Inlogic ships these the same way across Samsung Tizen and LG, and the no-monetization stance fits the format.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The bigger question is what this is doing on a 65-inch OLED. The mechanic is a phone idle-game built for thirty-second waits at a bus stop, not for a living-room screen with a remote you're already holding to navigate Netflix. There is no two-player mode, no asynchronous score-sharing, no reason the TV context adds anything the phone version doesn't already do better.
Polish is functional rather than considered — the block art is plain, the sound design is a single click, and there's no meta-progression to pull you back after the first run. A leaderboard tied to the LG account would have been the obvious win.
CONCLUSION
Tower Master is the casual-game equivalent of a hotel-room TV channel — present, free, occasionally useful, never the reason you turned the TV on. Install it if you want a thirty-second distraction the kids can pick up without instructions; skip it if you have a phone within reach. It earns the install slot on a TV that has nothing else in this category, and not much more.