Draw or Delete LoveStory
How to Play
Game Overview
Draw or Delete LoveStory is this weirdly charming puzzle game where you're basically a detective poking through a couple's private life. The premise is simple: you get a picture of a scene from their relationship, and a task like 'find the hidden gift' or 'remove the awkward photo.' You either draw in something new -- a heart, a key, whatever -- or erase parts of the image to reveal what's underneath. The visual style is clean and cartoonish, almost like a mobile comic strip, with bright colors and exaggerated expressions on the characters' faces. Playing it feels a bit like solving those hidden object puzzles in old point-and-click games, but way more interactive because you're actually altering the scene. You'll swipe to draw a line or tap to erase, and each level takes maybe a minute or two. The vibe is light and playful, though some scenarios touch on relationship drama like jealousy or misunderstandings -- nothing too heavy, just enough to make you smirk. Who gets hooked? Probably anyone who enjoys quick brain teasers without a story heavy enough to care about. It's the kind of game you play while waiting for coffee or riding the bus. The tasks range from obvious to genuinely tricky, and sometimes you'll draw something that feels completely wrong until the game confirms it's right. That part is oddly satisfying. The whole thing is free online, no downloads, just browser-based nonsense that actually works well on a phone.
About Draw or Delete LoveStory
Draw or Delete LoveStory is one of those games that sounds weird until you try it, and then you're hooked for an hour. You play as a detective poking through a couple's messy relationship, but instead of interrogating people, you're literally drawing or erasing stuff in each scene to move the story forward. It's an arcade puzzle thing where each level is a static picture with a task written at the top--like "Make them smile" or "Remove the lie." At first it's obvious: you see a sad face, you draw a smile over it, done. But it gets weird fast.
The loop is simple: look at the image, figure out what needs to change, then either draw something new or erase something that's there. On your phone you use your finger, on PC you use a mouse--both work fine. The satisfying part is when you erase just the right part of a letter to reveal a hidden message, or draw a tiny object that completely changes the scene. Around level 15, things start requiring actual logic. There's a level called "The Secret Drawer" where you have to erase a shadow to find a key, then draw a hand to pick it up--it's not stated clearly, you just have to realize the shadow is blocking things.
Difficulty builds mostly through indirect hints. Early levels tell you exactly what to do, but later ones like "Forgotten Anniversary" just say "Fix the date" and you have to erase the calendar numbers and draw new ones that match a clue hidden in the background. There's an "Envy" mechanic where green marks appear on objects--you can't interact with them until you draw a red "X" over something else first. It's annoying but clever.
The game has no upgrade system, no levels or points. The reward is just seeing the next piece of the couple's story unfold. Some levels are pure frustration--I spent ten minutes on "The Empty Frame" because I kept erasing the whole picture instead of just the dust on the glass. But when you nail a tough one, the picture animates for a second, and that tiny burst makes it worth it. The controls never get more complex, but your brain has to shift from literal thinking to abstract guessing. It's not a long game--maybe 50 levels--but the last few require you to remember details from earlier scenes, which is a nice touch 🔍.
Tips & Tricks
Start each level by looking at the task before you touch the screen at all. I wasted a lot of time drawing random things when the solution was just erasing a small detail. Some puzzles have a timer in the background, but it doesn't actually count down -- that's a fake-out to make you rush, so ignore it. The drawing tool is way more forgiving than you'd think; even a messy circle works as long as the shape is roughly right. Early on, I spent minutes trying to draw a perfect heart when a lopsided blob passed just fine. Erasing is often the real trick -- you can delete half a drawn object to reveal something underneath, which the game never explains. Watch for objects that are slightly off-color or misplaced; those are usually clues you need to erase or add to. One level had me stuck for ages because I kept trying to draw a key when I actually needed to erase part of a door frame. If the solution feels too obvious, it probably means you're missing a step -- sometimes you have to draw and then erase in sequence. The restart button is your friend; don't keep piling on mistakes when a fresh view helps. Also, the couple's faces change expression slightly when you're on the right track, so pay attention to those little details.
Comments
Please login to leave a comment.