A quiet gallery, a stone pedestal, and an endless supply of glass. Glass Towers is a 3D balance game where every drop is a small act of nerve: aim the hovering piece, rotate it if you dare, and let it fall. Each landing rings a chime that climbs with your sculpture — until one piece slips, and the whole thing sings its way to the floor. Built for anyone who has ever stacked things that shouldn't be stacked.
Glass Towers is a free 3D physics stacking game that runs in your browser. You drop translucent glass shapes onto a stone pedestal and balance them into the tallest sculpture you can. The run ends the moment any piece falls off the pedestal.
Move the hovering piece with your mouse, a finger drag, or the arrow keys. Press R or the rotate button to turn it. Click, tap, or press Space to drop. Settled pieces score points, and centered drops earn Perfect bonuses that build a combo.
Wide, flat pieces like slabs and ingots make the best foundations. Keep each new piece's weight over the middle of the stack, and save tall, narrow columns for moments when the tower underneath is solid. Rotating a piece with R can match its footprint to whatever it lands on.
Yes — press R on a keyboard or tap the rotate button to turn the current piece in 45 degree steps. Rotating a slab or ingot changes its footprint, which matters when you're bridging a wobbly section.
Your best score and tallest height are saved in your own browser using local storage. Nothing is uploaded, there's no account, and the game runs entirely on your device.
Those are level-based stacking games with timers, coins, and ads. Glass Towers is one endless sculpture: real 3D rigid-body physics, translucent glass that lets you read the whole structure's lean, and no ads, coins, or signup. If you like destruction more than construction, try Shatter Lab.
Transparency is a gameplay feature, not just a look — because every piece is see-through, you can read exactly how the tower is leaning before you commit. Glass also sounds wonderful: every landing rings a chime that climbs as your sculpture grows. For pure glass art without the stakes, there's Glasshole.
Yes. Drag to aim, tap to drop, and use the on-screen rotate button. It works on iPhone, iPad, and Android in any modern browser with WebGL. No download or install required.