There’s been some pretty big news in the last couple of weeks in video game world: the long-running space shooter Destiny 2 is winding up after almost nine years, PlayStation appears to have decided to stop releasing its flagship single-player games on PC, and Microsoft wants us to look like we’re shouting every time we type XBOX. But the biggest news for me is that I have found my new favourite word game. I am going to be so bold as to call it the new Wordle.Ribbit is one of the varied suite of daily games on Puzzmo, an online puzzle platform. It launched at the beginning of January, but I only recently discovered it because I have been unwell, bored, and spending too much time on my phone. Puzzmo’s daily hits include a satisfying shape-arranging game, variations on chess that make me feel extremely stupid, and pleasing word games, which are my favourites. Circuits has you making connections between the beginnings and ends of phrases (eg “stone cold > cold medicine > medicine cabinet”) as fast as you can. Bongo gives you a bunch of letter tiles and asks you to arrange them for a maximum score.But none of them compares to Ribbit. It gives you a maze of letters connected by lines, and you have to find the words hidden within them. If you like Spelling Bee or Wordscapes, you will love this – but what separates Ribbit is clever visual design. You can see how the letters are supposed to connect, which means that each word you find eliminates other possibilities. If you find all the words with a particular letter in them, then that letter turns into a happy little frog. As you keep finding words, the screen fills up with frogs, until eventually you find them all, and then the frogs sing to you.Soon, your screen is full of smug-looking little frogs who sing to you. Photograph: PuzzmoOne word is always an especially long one: I found hippocampus in a recent puzzle in under a minute and experienced a rush of bliss comparable to the first sip of a cold pint on a sunny day. I find it inordinately entertaining for something so seemingly simple, in exactly the way that Wordle was back in 2022. It’s a perfect 10-minute-long daily moment of feeling competent and intelligent. The frogs, when they appear after a successful move, reflect my own smugness right back at me. Who doesn’t want to start (or end) their day by filling their phone screen full of contented-looking colourful amphibians? I reckon Puzzmo needs to start providing a way of sharing your results that involves a lot of frog emojis, in order to kickstart the virality that Wordle’s mysterious green, gray and yellow cubes inspired on Twitter.It’s also a perfect example of a “screentime swap” – a way of using your phone that doesn’t make you feel like your brain is being slowly poisoned. Realistically, quitting our phones isn’t going to happen for most of us, because of inconvenient things such as our jobs, and the unfortunate necessity of school class WhatsApp groups. But reintroducing even a little intentionality into the way we use our phones can have a transformative effect, keeping us away from attention-draining algorithmic content and mindless scrolling. Playing a puzzle instead of scrolling a feed before I get out of bed in the morning makes me feel markedly better.Worthwhile games don’t always occupy entire evenings or weekends or months of our lives. Sometimes they exist in these little moments in between everyday life. When I interviewed the people who make Candy Crush a couple of years ago – one of the simplest and also most popular games in the world – they took pride in occupying that space. “It doesn’t interfere or compete with something else that’s important in your life. It fits into small pockets of your day. And solving small problems is a uniquely interesting thing to human beings,” said Paula Ingvar, head of Candy Crush’s sibling game Soda Saga at the time. “It’s great to start your day by winning at something. The latest research we have on mental health is that if you achieve something small, you’re ready to tackle something bigger.”Ribbit is my current little win. Get in on it now – if I have anything to do with it, it’s about to leap into the big time.What to playClever and cute … Yoshi and the Mysterious Book. Photograph: NintendoIf you are not currently roaring through a virtual Tokyo in a Forza Horizon supercar, might I suggest this adorable and unusual new puzzle-platform game starring Nintendo’s friendly dinosaur? Yoshi has been the star of some of Nintendo’s best offbeat adventures and this imaginative new adventure, Yoshi and the Mysterious Book, is much cleverer than its cuteness may suggest. As Yoshi travels through the pages of an anthropomorphic nature encyclopedia, meeting the creatures described within, developer Good-Feel throws creative ideas around with wild abandon. A particularly appealing game if you’ve got children who will watch you play and contribute puzzle-solving suggestions.Available on: Nintendo Switch 2