đ°đȘ A rabbit just stole your savings, so⊠sprint politely
Follow Tuto begins with the kind of betrayal that feels silly until you realize youâre actually invested. A white rabbit bolts off with your hard-earned coins, and the only reasonable response is to chase it across strange little worlds that behave like puzzle boxes. On Kiz10, this isnât a loud action game where you mash buttons and hope for miracles. Itâs a puzzle and skill adventure where your brain does most of the running. Youâre following the rabbitâs path, collecting the coins it drops like breadcrumbs of guilt, and trying to reach the door it escaped through⊠while the stage itself keeps changing the rules under your feet.
The mood is bright and playful, but the levels carry that âone wrong move, now youâre stuckâ energy that makes you slow down. Youâll see coins glittering in awkward places, platforms that look safe until theyâre not, and routes that feel obvious until you take them and immediately think, wait⊠why did I commit to this? đ
đ§©đȘ Doors, routes, and the tiny panic of choosing wrong
Each stage feels like a compact maze with a clear finish line: the door. But getting to that door is rarely a straight line. Follow Tuto loves putting the answer in front of you while hiding the way to reach it behind timing, terrain, and those little âahaâ moments you only get after failing once. Sometimes the puzzle is about movement direction. Sometimes itâs about using the environment the right way. Sometimes itâs about setting up your approach so you donât slide past what you needed.
And thatâs the hook: movement here isnât just movement, itâs strategy. Your route is your plan. The moment you step onto a surface, youâre basically voting for a future. If itâs a sticky section, it might slow you down or trap you in place unless you approach it correctly. If itâs a slippery stretch, it can fling you into the wrong lane if you enter it at the wrong angle. Doors donât care about your excuses. Either you arrive⊠or you donât. đ«
đ§ČđŠ Sticky floors, watery paths, and the art of staying composed
Follow Tuto shines when the level introduces surfaces that act like moods. Some areas feel sticky, like the ground wants to keep you there. Other areas feel slick or watery, like youâre skating on a decision you made two seconds ago. These mechanics are simple, but they force you to think ahead. You canât always correct mid-slide. You canât always brute-force through a bad approach. So you start playing the level like a chessboard, even if it looks like a cartoon playground.
Thatâs where it becomes addictive. The game teaches you to read the stage before you move. Whereâs the safe stop point? Whereâs the funnel that will throw you toward a hazard? Whereâs the spot you need to reach to line up the next move cleanly? The first time you clear a tricky section, it feels like luck. The second time, it feels like control. The third time, you start thinking maybe youâre actually good at this. Then the next stage arrives and humbles you immediately. Classic puzzle life. đ
đȘâš Coins are optional⊠until your brain says theyâre not
Coins are the quiet obsession in Follow Tuto. Technically, you can focus on reaching the door and ignore the shiny trail. Practically, you will not ignore the shiny trail. The rabbitâs coins feel like part of the chase, like proof youâre closing the distance. And the game places them in a way that turns each level into two challenges at once: escape the stage and clean it out.
Thatâs where the best tension lives. The safe route to the door might leave coins behind. The coin route might force you into risky surfaces, longer detours, or tighter timing. Your brain starts bargaining with itself. âIâll grab the easy ones.â Then you see a coin sitting right beside a dangerous edge and your hand moves on its own. Follow Tuto doesnât punish greed because it hates you. It punishes greed because greed makes the puzzle interesting. đȘđ
đŠâ ïž Hazards that turn a calm plan into a messy scramble
As you move deeper, levels introduce obstacles that feel like little ambushes. Youâll deal with patterns, threats, and moments where you canât just wander around testing ideas forever. Some dangers push you to keep moving. Others punish sloppy timing. The point isnât to turn the game into a twitch reflex nightmare, but to add pressure so your solutions have to be clean.
And clean solutions are the real reward. When you solve a level perfectly, it doesnât feel like you âcompletedâ something. It feels like you outsmarted it. The route becomes smooth, the coins get collected naturally, and you hit the door like it was inevitable. That feeling is why you keep playing. Not because the story demands it, but because your brain loves proving it can do it better than last time. đ
đ§ đșïž The mental shift: from chasing to predicting
At first, you chase the rabbit like a reaction game. You see a path, you take it. Later, you start predicting. You learn to scan a level and spot its traps before you trigger them. You notice which surfaces are âcommitment surfacesâ and which ones let you adjust. You identify the coin placements that are bait. You begin planning in small sequences: take this route, collect that line, avoid that surface until the end, then approach the door from the safer side.
That shift is the real progression. Follow Tuto doesnât need a huge upgrade tree to feel like youâre improving. You improve because you read better. You hesitate less in the right moments and more in the right moments too, which sounds contradictory, but itâs the truth of puzzle games. You move faster because you pause smarter. đ§ âš
đđ° The funniest part is how serious it gets
Thereâs a comedic contrast that makes the whole thing work. Youâre chasing a cute rabbit in a bright world⊠and youâre treating every step like itâs life or death because you want those coins and you want that clean clear. Youâll catch yourself staring at the board, hovering your cursor, waiting for the exact right approach, like youâre planning a high-stakes escape. Then you misjudge a slippery tile by a millimeter and your whole plan collapses in a very cartoon way. You sigh, you laugh, you restart. That loop is the charm.
Follow Tuto is a puzzle adventure that rewards patience, route planning, and a little stubbornness. Itâs easy to understand instantly, but it stays interesting because the levels keep remixing how surfaces behave and how your choices lock in your next move. If you like clever logic games where movement is the puzzle, coins are the temptations, and every stage feels like a tiny chase scene, this one fits perfectly on Kiz10. đ°đȘđȘ