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Putt Day
Most mini golf games offer dozens of levels to clear in one sitting. Putt Day does the opposite. Instead of overwhelming players with endless courses, it delivers a single handcrafted hole every day, turning each round into a small daily puzzle rather than a marathon.
Every course is shared by the entire community, meaning everyone faces the exact same layout. That simple idea makes each hole feel more meaningful. Instead of rushing through content, you're encouraged to study the terrain, experiment with different shot angles, and see how efficiently you can reach the cup compared with everyone else.
How to Play Putt Day
The controls couldn't be simpler.
PC Controls
- Left Mouse Button: Aim and hit the ball
- Drag Mouse: Adjust shot direction and power
Each daily course introduces its own combination of ramps, bumpers, portals, jumps, and unusual terrain. Success rarely comes from hitting the ball as hard as possible. Reading the layout is often more important than executing the shot itself.
Older daily holes remain available through the archive, making it easy to revisit previous challenges or improve scores you weren't satisfied with.
Every Hole Is a Puzzle
Putt Day feels closer to solving a physics puzzle than playing traditional mini golf.
Many obstacles aren't simply hazards. They're shortcuts waiting to be discovered. A carefully angled bounce may skip several sections of the course, while an unconventional route can dramatically reduce your stroke count.
This makes experimentation part of the experience. Even after reaching the hole, you'll often wonder whether an even better solution exists.
Why Putt Day Is So Addictive
The game's strongest idea isn't its physics or its obstacles. It's the daily format.
With only one new course released each day, there's no pressure to binge dozens of levels. Instead, Putt Day becomes something you check in on for a few minutes before moving on with your day.
That design also creates a shared experience. Since every player tackles the same hole, comparing scores feels meaningful rather than random. Finding an unexpected shortcut or shaving a few strokes off your previous attempt becomes surprisingly satisfying, giving each tiny course far more replay value than its size suggests. Next game: Jumpy Jelly.










