Lawn Mower
Plan your mowing route, scoop up coins, and beat the yard timer without chewing up the flowerbeds.
Gameplay overview
Striped lawn perfection
Each level of Lawn Mower drops you into a tidy suburban yard packed with hedges, beds, and stone pathways. Glide the mower around the map to cut every patch of long grass while steering clear of delicate decorations and hazards that cost you stars.
Coins collected along the way unlock helpful upgrades, from faster engines to wider blades. Target time goals and clean cuts earn up to three stars per course, encouraging repeat runs to perfect your mowing patterns.
Controls
Simple steering and boosts
- Arrow keys / WASD: Steer the lawn mower through each yard.
- Mouse drag (touch): On mobile, swipe to adjust direction.
- Spacebar / Tap boost: Trigger temporary speed bursts when available.
- P / Pause: Pause the action and review the map.
Why play it?
Relaxing arcade challenge
- Quick-fire levels combine chill lawn care vibes with tight scoring targets.
- Upgrades and coins reward efficient mowing lines and hazard avoidance.
- Bright visuals and smooth controls make it ideal for short breaks.
Tips
Clip every corner
- Outline the yard first to avoid missing grass along fences and hedges.
- Keep an eye on the timer and save boosts for long straightaways.
- Plan turns early so you do not drift into fragile garden decor.
Our take
Why Lawn Mower is a tidy little puzzler
Lawn Mower turns a mundane chore into a route-planning exercise where every turn and overlap matters. You’re constantly looking for ways to cover the most ground with the fewest passes, which scratches the same itch as line-drawing and path-optimisation games.
The clean visuals and short levels make it easy to drop in, solve a yard or two, and step away feeling like you completed something. It’s a good fit when you want light planning without heavy mechanics.
Who will enjoy it?
Players who like relaxing spatial puzzles and don’t mind a humble theme will find Lawn Mower surprisingly engaging. If you’re looking for speed or story it stays low-key, but as a gentle optimisation toy it’s pleasant.