LG / game / UNBLOCK THAT
REVIEW
Unblock That is competent couch-puzzle filler on LG webOS.
Inlogic's free Rush Hour clone for LG TVs — slide the red block out through the gap. Hundreds of stages, remote-friendly controls, exactly as much depth as the genre allows.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
Unblock That
INLOGIC SOFTWARE S.R.O.
OUR SCORE
6.8
LG
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Unblock That is the free Rush Hour clone that landed on LG webOS and stuck around because nobody else bothered. Inlogic Software, a Slovak studio that has been quietly shipping casual puzzle games to smart-TV stores for the better part of a decade, treats the genre with the right kind of seriousness — the move grader works, the lane snapping is tuned for the Magic Remote, the stage count runs into the hundreds. None of which makes the game interesting beyond what the genre was already capable of in 2010, but all of which makes it the correct install if a sliding-block puzzle is what you want on a TV.
The game asks for fifteen seconds of attention at a time, which is the right ask for a TV puzzle game. You stare at a tangle of blocks during an ad break in something else, see the route, slide three pieces, win, queue the next stage. Nobody is playing this for an hour straight, and the design tacitly accepts that — the difficulty curve is gentle, the failure state is forgiving, the loop is built for context-switching rather than concentration.
What it doesn’t do is push the genre. The hardest stages are harder by clutter, not by idea, and after a few evenings the pattern recognition kicks in and the remaining hundred levels start to feel like the same level. That’s a fair tradeoff for free, less fair if Inlogic ever flips on a paid tier. For now it’s a competent install on a row of TV-app icons that mostly aren’t.
Unblock That asks for fifteen seconds of attention at a time, which is the right ask for a TV puzzle game.
FEATURES
Unblock That is a sliding-block puzzle in the Rush Hour tradition. A grid of horizontal and vertical blocks crowds a six-by-six board; the red block has to reach the exit on the right edge; every other block slides along its axis to make room. Move count is tracked per stage, and most levels have a known minimum-move solution the game grades you against.
Inlogic ships the LG webOS build as a free download with hundreds of stages organised into difficulty tiers — from two-move warmups to twenty-plus-move tangles that take a few minutes of staring. Controls map to the Magic Remote: point at a block, click, drag along its lane. Directional-pad fallback works on older LG remotes but is slower for the diagonal-heavy boards in later tiers.
Ads sit between stages on the free tier — banner during play, interstitial roughly every fifth completion. No in-app purchase to remove them on the webOS build at time of writing.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The control scheme is the right call for a TV puzzle game. Pointing at a block and dragging it is the closest a remote can get to the touch-and-flick gesture this genre was designed around, and Inlogic has tuned the hit targets so the Magic Remote rarely misreads which block you meant. Lane snapping is generous without being sloppy.
Stage count is the other genuine win. There's enough volume here — easily a hundred hours if you're a completionist — that the free price tag holds up even with the ad break cadence.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Level design plateaus around the middle tiers. The hardest stages are harder than the easy ones in move count, not in idea — they're the same mechanic with more clutter. A handful of variant mechanics (timed exits, multi-coloured target blocks, gravity twists) would extend the game's shelf life past the first few evenings.
Interstitial ads on a TV screen at couch distance are jarring; the cadence feels tuned for phone play and ports across without adjustment. A paid ad-removal tier would be a fair trade.
CONCLUSION
Unblock That earns its install on an LG TV as the genre's free default. It's not trying to reinvent Rush Hour and it doesn't need to — what it owes the player is responsive remote controls and a stage list deep enough to justify the icon on the home row, and both hold up. Casual puzzle players will get their money's worth, which on the free tier is straightforward arithmetic. Anyone wanting the slide-block genre evolved past 2010 will need to look on phones.