We report a new classical spin liquid in which the collective flux degrees of freedom break the translation symmetry of the honeycomb lattice. This exotic phase exists in frustrated spin-orbit magnets where a dominant off-diagonal exchange, the so-called $Gamma$ term, results in a macroscopic ground-state degeneracy at the classical level. We demonstrate that the system undergoes a phase transition driven by thermal order-by-disorder at a critical temperature $T_c approx 0.04 |Gamma|$. At first sight, this transition reduces an emergent spherical spin-symmetry to a cubic one: spins point predominantly toward the cubic axes at $T < T_c$. However, this seems to simply restore the cubic symmetry of the $Gamma$ model, and the non-coplanar spins remain disordered below $T_c$. We show that the phase transition actually corresponds to plaquette ordering of hexagonal fluxes and the cubic symmetry is indeed broken, a scenario that is further confirmed by our extensive Monte Carlo simulations.