Infinite brick rummaging with real-time physics and sound
An endless sensory bin of bricks, plates, tiles, round pieces, and slopes. Brush the surface, dig deeper, pick up any piece, or let screensaver mode play on its own. There are no scores, timers, or goals.
Mouse, touch, and keyboard controls
Behavior, sound, mobile controls, privacy, and more
More work from Chris Pirillo
Other playful experiments from the arcade
Brick ASMR is an independent browser toy inspired by generic plastic building bricks. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the LEGO Group.
Brick ASMR is a free sensory toy: an infinite pile of solid toy bricks, plates, tiles, round pieces, and slopes with real rigid-body physics, running entirely in your browser. Move your pointer to shuffle the pile, drag to dig deeper, and press any visible piece to pick it up, move or shake it, and release to drop it. No account, no download.
On desktop, simply moving the pointer shuffles the top layer. Hold and drag to dig deeper. Press any visible piece to pick it up. It follows the pointer while the button is held, and drops the instant you release. Simply gliding the mouse also brushes across and disrupts the pile. On touch screens, drag to rummage and tap or press a brick to carry it.
Yes. Right-click and drag (or use two fingers on mobile) to roam in any direction — the pile generates endlessly as you go, and bricks you have displaced stay where you left them as you move around. There is no edge and no wall.
Yes. Choose from every imported named palette, generate a completely new color mix, select a random named preset, or define six custom colors. Changes recolor the entire pile live — no reload, no reset.
Sound is generated only while pieces are moving. Hundreds of tiny contacts are combined into a dense, continuously changing plastic sift with short scrapes, rustling movement, and occasional harder knocks. The texture is synthesized at audio rate rather than replayed as a loop, and it fades to complete silence when the pile settles.
Yes. One finger sweeps and digs, press-and-drag picks up one piece and releasing drops it, two fingers pan around the infinite pile, and pinch zooms in and out. The simulation automatically scales itself down for phone performance.
Yes. Use Screenshot for a still PNG, or Record for a clip. Recording downloads as an MP4 (WebM in Firefox) or an animated GIF, in landscape, portrait, or square, so it is ready for whichever feed you are posting to. GIF is a 256-color format that suits short clips — the flat brick colors look great, but keep it brief since GIFs get large. Keep the tab in front while it records so the clip stays smooth.
No. Everything runs entirely in your browser. No data is sent to any server, no account is required, and nothing is tracked beyond standard analytics.
No. Brick ASMR is an independent toy that simulates generic plastic building bricks. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the LEGO Group. It exists to recreate one specific childhood feeling: digging through a big bin of bricks looking for the right piece.
That is exactly what it is for. The tactile digging, tumbling physics, and layered clatter make it a satisfying fidget and ASMR experience. There are no scores, timers, or goals — just an endless bin. If you'd rather build with bricks than dig through them, try BrickGen on this same arcade.