Solar Smash: The Most Satisfying Way to Destroy a Planet
Have you ever looked up at the night sky and thought, "What would happen if I fired a laser beam straight at Earth?" No? Just me? Well, either way, there's a game for that — and it's oddly one of the most relaxing experiences you can have on a screen.
What Is This Game, Exactly?
Solar Smash is a planet destruction simulator that does exactly what it sounds like. You pick a planet, choose a weapon, and watch the chaos unfold. That's pretty much the whole premise. There's no storyline, no missions, no pressure — just you, a celestial body, and an increasingly ridiculous arsenal of ways to obliterate it.
It sounds destructive (because it is), but there's something genuinely fascinating about the physics, the visuals, and the sheer variety of ways a planet can meet its end. It's part sandbox game, part science curiosity, and honestly a little bit therapeutic after a rough day.
How the Gameplay Works
The controls are refreshingly simple. You rotate the planet with one finger (or your mouse), then select a weapon from the panel on the side. From there, you aim and fire.
Your starting weapons are straightforward — meteor showers, laser beams, missile barrages. But as you experiment more, you'll unlock increasingly wild options: black holes, UFO invasions, giant worms that burrow through the planet's core, and even something that looks suspiciously like a Death Star.
Each weapon interacts with the planet differently. Lasers carve clean, glowing slices. Meteors chip away at the surface and leave craters. A black hole slowly pulls the entire planet apart in a swirling, mesmerizing spiral. The visual feedback is genuinely impressive for a free-to-play title.
You can also switch between different planets — Earth, Mars, Jupiter, the Moon — each with its own visual texture and atmosphere that reacts differently to your weapons.
A Few Tips to Get More Out of It
Start slow. It's tempting to throw everything at the planet at once, but taking your time with individual weapons lets you actually appreciate the physics and visuals. Try a single laser beam before going full apocalypse mode.
Experiment with angles. Hitting a planet straight-on gives one result; grazing the atmosphere from the side gives something entirely different. The game rewards curiosity.
Try the black hole last. Use every other weapon first, get the planet down to a battered, half-melted rock, then drop the black hole. The final collapse looks genuinely spectacular.
Don't sleep on the UFO swarm. It sounds silly, but watching a coordinated alien invasion chip away at a planet piece by piece is oddly entertaining.
Worth Your Time?
If you're looking for a deep narrative experience or competitive gameplay, this probably isn't it. But if you want something low-stakes, visually impressive, and weirdly fun to just mess around with for twenty minutes, Solar Smash absolutely delivers. Sometimes the best games don't ask anything of you — they just let you play.
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