Biomutant rotation puzzle – how to solve the white and orange light puzzles
Biomutant rotation puzzles explained and how to solve them
Biomutant rotation puzzles are everywhere. The first ones you're likely to stumble upon are the Flush-Stool and Fry-Sparker (toilet and microwave) in Bricktown, but the concept is the same for any puzzle in Biomutant. Some of them are incredibly easy to solve while others – I'm looking at you, Terra Globus – are much more infuriating to solve. Here's everything you need to know about Biomutant rotation puzzles.
Biomutant tips | Biomutant map | How long is Biomutant | Biomutant tribe choice | Biomutant resistances | Biomutant class guide
Biomutant rotation puzzles explained
Whether you're hunting down one of the plethora of collectibles the game has or you need to solve it to continue with the story, Biomutant rotation puzzles are everywhere. The gist of things is that you simply need to match up the colors; orange to orange and white to white.
This is often easier said than done though. Things like Flush-Stools are relatively easy – just rotate the wheels to make sure the lights connect. Fry-Sparkers are even easier because the lines are always just vertical. But you only have 10 moves to do it in, which adds some pressure. Thankfully, if you get one wrong, you're able to jump back in and try again. Here are the full list of collectibles with Biomutant rotation puzzles we've found in Biomutant:
- Flush-Stools (toilets)
- Fry-Sparkers (microwaves)
- Bleep-Bleep Cupboard (arcade machines)
- Terra Globuses (globes)
- Raylighters (projectors)
- String-Plonks (pianos)
- Twing-Twangs (guitars)
- Eye-Boxes (televisions)
- Pling-Plong Booths (phone booths)
- Stronkboxes (safes)
- Spiral Groovers (record players)
- Ring-Dingers (telephones)
Every single one follows the same format. So experiment a little and you should find the solution for each Biomutant rotation puzzle before long.
Sign up to the 12DOVE Newsletter
Weekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and more
Give me a game and I will write every "how to" I possibly can or die trying. When I'm not knee-deep in a game to write guides on, you'll find me hurtling round the track in F1, flinging balls on my phone in Pokemon Go, pretending to know what I'm doing in Football Manager, or clicking on heads in Valorant.
Borderlands 2 player who spent 9 months trying to finish the game without getting hit was beaten to the punch 10 hours before finally accomplishing his goal
Monster Hunter Wilds player uses the power of math to prove why the beta left "some weapons feeling worse" compared to Monster Hunter World or Rise