App Feature
A casual puzzle game where you draw the missing part of whimsical illustrations to solve logic-based riddles. Core features include touch-based drawing recognition, a progressive difficulty curve, dozens of hand-drawn levels, a hint system, autosave, relaxing music/sfx, and mostly offline play.
Verdict
Verdict: A charming, low-friction drawing puzzle that’s great for quick brain-teasers, but ad-heavy unless you pay or play offline.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Casual players seeking short, satisfying logic puzzles
- Kids and families who enjoy creative, drawing-based gameplay
Not ideal for:
- Players sensitive to frequent ads or restarts
- Puzzle fans wanting deep difficulty or long-form challenges
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Light, creative puzzles that ramp from easy to moderately tricky; forgiving recognition that accepts approximate drawings; relaxing music and cute art; good for offline play and quick sessions; generous level count.
Users complain about:
Ads after many levels (some report almost every level); occasional app restarts when returning after a few minutes; a few players want clearer difficulty tiers or categorized puzzle sets.
Is it Worth Paying For?
Free to download with ads and optional IAPs (likely for hints/ad removal). If you enjoy the core loop but dislike interruptions, the ad-removal purchase offers clear value; otherwise, playing offline mitigates ads but limits on-demand hints.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Versus Brain Test/Tricky Test, DOP 4 leans into drawing recognition over pure riddles. Compared to Happy Glass or Draw It, it’s broader in scenario variety and friendlier to rough sketches. Against earlier DOP entries, it feels more polished with better art/audio and a steadier difficulty curve, though ad pressure is similar across the genre.
Summary
DOP 4: Draw One Part refines the sketch-to-solve puzzle formula with charming art, intuitive drawing recognition, and a steady stream of bite-sized challenges. It’s ideal for quick mental breaks, family-friendly play, and offline sessions. While the hint system and progression keep frustration low, frequent ads can break flow unless you pay to remove them or toggle offline. If you like creative, low-stress brain teasers and don’t need deep complexity, this is an easy recommendation—especially for mobile play on the go.














