Interior design game
Fun, competitive room planning. Floorly drops a new space planning challenge every week — fit a home office into 120 sq ft, lay out a studio for two, design a nursery on a budget — and you battle the constraints with real-to-scale furniture.
One room. One constraint. One winning layout — yours.
Each room design challenge starts with a real constraint: an awkward studio, a tiny office, a weird L-shaped living room. Floorly hands you the floor plan and the rules.
Drag in real-to-scale furniture, hit the constraints, and submit your space planning challenge solution from inside the canvas.
Creative, well-fitting layouts earn extra AI feature tokens you can spend on the AI Floor Assistant, 3D preview, and other Pro tools.
Fresh constraints keep your space planning skills sharp — the kind of weird spaces you actually run into when you move.
Top submissions earn bonus AI feature tokens — usable on AI Floor Assistant, 3D preview, and other Pro tools without upgrading.
After you submit, browse other layouts for the same room. Steal the moves you love and learn what you missed.
Furniture layout is a skill. The more rooms you arrange, the easier the next move, the next office, the next space becomes.
Each challenge is a single floor plan with a constraint baked in: a 120-square-foot home office that has to hold a desk plus a guest pull-out, a studio that needs to sleep two without losing the living area, a nursery on a strict budget that still needs storage. The constraint is the point — anyone can fill a 2,000-square-foot great room, but the layouts that win Floorly challenges are the ones that solve a problem with the inches available.
You drag in real-to-scale furniture from the catalog or your own inventory, hit submit, and Floorly scores creative and well-fitting layouts with bonus AI tokens — usable on the AI Floor Assistant, accessibility checker, and other Pro features. After submission, browse other layouts for the same brief, steal the moves you like, and notice the tricks you missed. The whole loop is a low-stakes way to keep your space planning instincts sharp between actual moves.