Rubix Solver is built for the moment when the cube in your hand does not match any tutorial. Instead of following a generic lesson, you paint the stickers you actually see, tap solve, and follow the move sequence created for that exact scramble.

The app supports the two cube sizes most people search for: the standard 3x3 Rubik's Cube and the smaller 2x2 pocket cube. Both use the same simple flow: choose the cube size, enter the colors face by face, check the preview, and follow the animated moves.

Why a solver app helps

Tutorials are great when you are learning a method. A solver app is better when you need a custom answer for a real cube state. The app checks the sticker colors, sends the facelets to a solver, and gives you a move sequence that works for that cube.

  • Use it when your cube is scrambled beyond a tutorial example.
  • Use it when you want to check whether a cube is physically possible.
  • Use it when you are learning notation and want to see moves play out.
  • Use it when a 2x2 or 3x3 cube needs a fast reset.

Built for visual solving

Many cube solvers show a string of moves and leave the rest to you. Rubix Solver turns the solution into an animated walkthrough. You can follow one move at a time, adjust the speed, and use the preview to keep your real cube oriented correctly.

That matters because most solving mistakes are not caused by the algorithm. They happen when the cube is held the wrong way, a face is rotated in the wrong direction, or the input colors are entered in the wrong order.

3x3 and 2x2 support

The 3x3 solver uses the center stickers to understand the cube orientation. The 2x2 solver uses a fixed color mapping because pocket cubes do not have center stickers. In both cases, each color must appear the correct number of times before a real solution can be calculated.

For the standard cube, start with the 3x3 cube solver guide. For the pocket cube, start with the 2x2 cube solver guide.