mobilegames

Latest

  • Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night

    'Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night' will hit iOS and Android next month

    The mobile version of the action RPG arrives next month.

    Kris Holt
    11.06.2020
  • Samsung Galaxy Store

    Samsung redesigns its Galaxy Store to focus on games

    The streamlined home screen has just two tabs: one for apps, the other for games.

    Kris Holt
    10.30.2020
  • Journey

    iOS game sale offers discounts on 'Journey,' 'Flower' and 'Donut County'

    You can save on a bunch of Annapurna Interactive titles.

    Kris Holt
    07.27.2020
  • A screenshot from Call of Duty: Mobile

    Call of Duty: Mobile's $1 million esports tournament starts April 30th

    If you're ranked veteran or higher, you can compete for the 'Call of Duty: Mobile' world championship.

    Kris Holt
    04.22.2020
  • Nintendo

    'Dr. Mario World' hits iOS and Android a day early (updated)

    The doctor is in. Nintendo's latest mobile game, Dr. Mario World, has arrived a day early on iOS and Android. Several Engadget editors were able to play Nintendo's match-three puzzler before the expected launch date of July 10th. The new mobile title hit iOS early today before it became available on Android as well.

    Kris Holt
    07.09.2019
  • TOBIAS SCHWARZ via Getty Images

    'League of Legends' might be coming to smartphones

    League of Legends might eventually take up residence on fans' iOS and Android homescreens. Developer Riot is said to be working with parent company Tencent on a mobile version of the ultra-popular MOBA.

    Kris Holt
    05.22.2019
  • Alien: Blackout

    'Alien: Blackout' mobile game picks up where 'Isolation' left off

    Alien fans wondering what the franchise's official Instagram account was teasing last month across a series of motion posters, each more terrifying than the last, will be happy to learn that a new game is on the way. But we're not getting the console follow-up to Alien: Isolation players were (probably) hoping for. Instead, Alien: Blackout is a mobile title for iOS and Android starring that game's protagonist Amanda Ripley -- who also happens to be the daughter of the original film quadrilogy's iconic heroine, Ellen Ripley.

    Saqib Shah
    01.07.2019
  • Japan Times/Getty Images

    Japan thinks smartphones are destroying students’ eyesight

    The eyesight of Japan's students is deteriorating and the country's government thinks smartphones are to blame. A recent survey conducted by Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology found that the number of students with vision below the standard 1.0 score (equivalent to 20/20 vision) is at an all-time high of 25.3 percent. Worse still, just over 67 percent of high school students and more than 34 percent of elementary students didn't meet the bar. The government is attributing the trend to "increased time spent staring at [smartphone] screens...and mobile games."

    Saqib Shah
    12.24.2018
  • Niantic Labs

    'Pokemon Go' creator Niantic's Harry Potter game will arrive in 2019

    Pokemon Go developer Niantic Labs said last November that it was working on a Harry Potter mobile game, which will also focus on location-based and augmented-reality gameplay. The company has now revealed it will release Harry Potter: Wizards Unite in 2019, despite expectations that the game would arrive this year.

    Kris Holt
    11.14.2018
  • Jam City

    The latest Harry Potter mobile game puts Hogwarts in your pocket

    In Harry Potter: Hogwarts Mystery, which launched today for Android and iOS, players create their own character and progress through seven years of rigorous tutelage at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. They must choose their preferred House, survive potions class with Professor Snape, Transfigure themselves under the supervision of Professor McGonagall and even duel with other students. Not only that, players must also unravel the mystery as to why their in-game older brother was expelled from Hogwarts and reveal the sinister secrets he was pursuing.

  • Niantic

    Niantic's next AR game after ‘Pokémon Go’ may use audio cues

    Niantic is keen to prove that it's no one-trick pony. The company that brought augmented reality mobile gaming to the masses with Pokémon Go is dropping some interesting tidbits about its followup. The title will integrate audio prompts into its AR gameplay experience, the company's CTO Phil Keslin told TechCrunch. Instead of asking people to hold their phone up while interacting with the game, Keslin says the developer is seeking a more natural alternative. And, it seems audio cues could be the key to the Pokémon Go successor.

    Saqib Shah
    09.19.2017
  • Anonymous Inc

    Somebody turned Snapchat’s dancing hot dog into a mobile game

    Okay, it's not like anybody was clamoring for more of that absurd dancing hot dog Snapchat added to its filter options. But this is the internet -- don't ask, and ye shall receive anyway. Somebody took it upon themselves to cash in on the hype and make a simple platform-hopping app game featuring the boogie weenie. And it's actually kind of hard.

    David Lumb
    07.18.2017
  • China Stringer Network / Reuters

    Tencent's hit game 'Honor of Kings' might come to US and Europe

    Tencent has been taking on the Western video game market for some time now. The Chinese-based company has a stake in Activision, which in turn owns King, the maker of Candy Crush and an upcoming mobile iteration of Call of Duty. It also bought Supercell, the developer of massive hit, Clash of Clans, last year and purchased a majority stake in League of Legends' developer, Riot Games. Tencent also makes movies and is currently building an eSports complex and has plans for an Honor of Kings theme park. This last game is a massive hit in China, grabbing more than 50 million active users since its debut in 2015; the title brings in an estimated RMB 3 billion ($435 million) every month. According to Bloomberg, Tencent is making a move to bring Honor of Kings to the West, which could end up as serious competition for the mobile games the company also owns.

    Rob LeFebvre
    07.07.2017
  • Tencent

    Tencent tackles mobile game addiction with time limits for kids

    In the face of public pressure, Chinese internet giant Tencent is limiting play time for younger users of its hit mobile game Honor of Kings (dubbed Strike of Kings in the west). Starting Tuesday, anyone under 12 will be restricted to one hour of play per day, and those between 12 to 18 will be allowed two hours game time.

    Saqib Shah
    07.04.2017
  • Epic Games

    Lead an army of cartoon heroes in Epic's latest game

    Epic Games announced Battle Breakers, its new free-to-play title for mobile and PC, at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. The game looks like a Saturday-morning cartoon, complete with larger-than-life characters and a huge, cinematic soundtrack to enhance the gameplay.

    Rob LeFebvre
    02.27.2017
  • Michael Buckner via Getty Images

    The next 'Futurama' mobile game has the show's creators aboard

    Futurama continues to be the animated franchise that just won't die. Fox and developer TinyCo (a divison of Jam City) announced today that they're working on another mobile game from the series -- Futurama: Worlds of Tomorrow -- which will notably have creators Matt Groening and David X. Cohen involved. Even better, TinyCo is also working with the show's original voice actors, animators (Rough Draft Studio) and some of its writers. We still don't know what the game is actually about, but it's expected to land this summer as a free title. The developers will also be revealing more during a Facebook Live chat this afternoon.

  • Nicki Minaj's new game could make you a rap star

    It's hard to believe anyone that's not a Kardashian, a Jenner or a Ramsay can successfully make a game about their careers, but Nicki Minaj's new app actually sounds like fun. Through a collaboration with Glu Mobile -- the same company behind those Kim Kardashian, Kendall and Kylie Jenner, and Gordon Ramsay games -- Minaj made The Empire, a game that focuses on rap music and lets players create their own songs. In addition, you can record your own voice (rapping your own words) into the app, and Minaj herself (or her minions, anyway) will select the best few to showcase on her social media accounts. The Empire is now available on iOS and Android, and from my few days playing a beta preview, it seems like more than just another celebrity-branded app.

    Cherlynn Low
    12.07.2016
  • Noah Berger/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Sony is releasing at least five mobile games in Asia

    Sony's PlayStation division has finally revealed how it plans to conquer mobile device. According to Wall Street Journal, the unit aims to release five to six PS games for both iOS and Android devices under the ForwardWorks subsidiary it formed in March. The company didn't reveal a timeline along with the announcement, but it's apparently looking to launch all of them before March 2018. All the titles will initially be available in Japan, followed by other Asian countries. Unfortunately, fans in the US and in Europe will have to wait for further info -- the regions aren't part of Sony's current plans.

    Mariella Moon
    10.14.2016
  • Nintendo hints at smartphone controller plans

    Nintendo executives have dropped an unsubtle hint that it is working on a peripheral to enable people to play its action games on smartphones. At the firm's annual shareholders meeting, Shinya Takahashi said that his team have looked at third-party controllers on the market and "may develop something new by ourselves." Takahashi was responding to the question that playing Nintendo's more famous titles (i.e. Mario) is difficult using the virtual controls that are available with touchscreen devices. After all, it's clear that more than a few people would be happy to lay down money to play a classic Mario title on their smartphone.

    Daniel Cooper
    07.06.2016
  • New Gordon Ramsay mobile game brings the heat and profanity

    Ever dream of working in a kitchen with Gordon Ramsay breathing down your neck? With the new Gordon Ramsay Dash game, which lands on iOS and Android next week, you can get a taste of cooking in a stressful environment under the chef's watchful eye. I had a chance to speak about the game with Ramsay himself -- who, by the way, is unnervingly calm in person.

    Cherlynn Low
    06.24.2016