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Home / Features / The best Apple Arcade games to give you an instant gaming hit

The best Apple Arcade games to give you an instant gaming hit

For $6.99/£6.99 a month, get these top games on your iPhone, iPad, Apple TV and Mac

Apple Arcade December 2023

When it launched in 2019, Apple Arcade landed with a thump. Over 70 games showed up at once, all angling for attention. Dozens more have since been added to the service, including a range of App Store greats and timeless classics. If you own a current-gen iPhone (one of the best smartphones on sale right now) you really should be signed up.

But which should you try first? Our list unearths the best titles on Apple Arcade to give you an instant gaming hit, whether you fancy high-octane arcade action, a brief bout of puzzling, or a deeper gaming experience packed full of narrative and adventuring.

Apple Arcade costs $6.99/£6.99 per month or comes as part of every Apple One bundle.

Additional text: Matt Tate, Tom Morgan-Freelander

The best new Apple Arcade games

Get an instant fix with the Apple Arcade games tickling our fancy right now.

Balatro

This poker-inspired deckbuilding rouguelite is so addictive it should come with a health warning. Balatro has been doing the rounds on consoles and PC since the start of 2024, then Mac in March. Now it’s gone mobile, and office productivity will surely suffer as a result. What looks deceptively simple (play poker hands to reach a certain score each round, augment your deck with ability-granting Joker cards) quickly gets fiendishly clever as you work out synergies that’ll send your scores into the stratosphere.

Get Balatro

Cypher 007

Aside from a certain N64 effort, few Bond games have made a mark for the right reasons. But Cypher 007 is a bit of a gem. Top-down isometric stealth larks in the mould of classic Metal Gear Solid suit the Bond aesthetic. And plenty of iconic villains make an appearance in a surprisingly entertaining original story, while Q ensures you’ve a steady supply of gadgets to assist with your sneaking around.

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Finity

Another match-three puzzler. Slide rows of coloured blocks. Clear them on lining up three of the same type. New blocks fall. You know the drill. Here, though, you can only make finite moves before getting yourself into a right old mess. Blocks have turn-based timers and conditions on how you can move them. Eventually they lock up, forcing you to consider every swipe. Fortunately, the game doesn’t rush you, and the slick presentation means getting stuck has never been so satisfying.

Get Finity

Ridiculous Fishing Ex

How ridiculous can fishing be? Here, you plunge your line into the inky depths, weave left and right to avoid swimming critters, hook one, snare everything you can on the way back up, fling your catch skywards when it reaches the surface, and then blow it to smithereens with high-powered weaponry to earn cash for upgrades. So, er, that ridiculous. Reckon this is a bit fishy and now have deja vu? That’s because this is a remaster of a long-gone App Store classic. More of this, please, Apple.

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Stuff’s Apple Arcade favourites

All our previous entries, from the latest Arcade Originals to top-notch Timeless Classics and App Store Greats.

Shovel Knight Dig

The latest Shovel Knight spin-off has you use your trusty shovel to dig down through randomly generated 2D levels in a quest for loot – and whack enemies you meet along the way. You’ll meet a lot. Fortunately, funds gathered during each run can be used to purchase permanent upgrades that make things easier next time. The lead’s signature pogo-like shovel jump never stops being fun either, and the game pops on an OLED-toting iPhone. In short, you’ll dig it.

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Lego Star Wars: Castaways

Think Lost with Lego, Star Wars, less sinister mystery and more island dance parties, and that’s Lego Star Wars: Castaways. You create your own minifigure and spend time getting to know fellow castaways, exploring the long-forgotten island you now call home, and hopping into simulations to relive iconic Star Wars moments. It’s simpler than the long-running Travellers Tales Lego series, but you’ll return for the variety – and extensive customisation options that let you mould the Star Wars weirdo you’ve always dreamed of. 

Get Lego Star Wars: Castaways

Horizon Chase 2

Like the original Horizon Chase, this follow-up is a blazing-fast arcade racer, where you barrel along roads where everyone is suspiciously all driving in the same direction. Aside from spangly revamped visuals, the sequel adds a bunch of new challenges and the welcome addition of multiplayer. In all, it’s like having 90% of an OutRun 2 on your phone – or a modern remake of Amiga classic Lotus 3 or Top Gear. In short, it’s vrooming great.

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Gibbon: Beyond the Trees

There aren’t enough games that let you play as a monkey, so we’re especially grateful for this thought-provoking 2D effort from Broken Rules, in which you play as a gibbon simply trying to survive the myriad (but mostly human) threats to the forest it calls home. There’s a serious message here, but the game is also extremely fun to play, with some of the best swinging mechanics you’ll find outside of a Spider-Man game. 

Get Gibbon: Beyond the Trees

Skate City

There’s no shortage of excellent skateboarding games to play, but Skate City is one we’ve returned to since the early days of Apple Arcade. It’s a relatively minimalist 2.5D affair, with tricks executed using smartly implemented touch controls – if you don’t have a physical controller handy. There’s an objective-based career mode of sorts, but we prefer to chill out in the virtual recreations of real-life cities in ‘Free Skate’, which just lets you keep skating along until you lose interest. 

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Zen Pinball Party

Zen’s approach to smacking a metal ball around with flippers has long been to dispense with reality and make pinball tables come alive through animation and dynamic characters. That’s the case here, whether battling it out in Adventure LandKung Fu Panda or a surprisingly vicious Snoopy table. Prefer traditional fare? Top takes on Williams classics Theatre of MagicMedieval Madness and Attack from Mars will get your thumbs twitching.

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Alto’s Odyssey: The Lost City

The original Alto’s Odyssey was the most gorgeous one-thumb leapy game around, featuring a daredevil soaring above dunes, grinding along canyon walls, bouncing on balloons, and trying to not get monstered by a lemur or fall down a ravine. This add-on has you find pieces of a map that unlock the titular Lost City, a vibrant, living biome that neatly contrasts with the lonely ruins elsewhere in the game. 

Get Alto’s Odyssey: The Lost City

SP!NG

Despite the minimalist visuals, the exhilarating one-thumb action in SP!NG makes you feel like Spider-Man as you swing through side-on levels, getting into the flow and scooping up diamonds. Right up until you impale yourself on a spike, that is. Fortunately, levels are short and possible to memorise – just as well when aiming for bling-collection perfection.

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Taiko no Tatsujin Pop Tap Bea‪t

Guitar Hero? Pah! Drumming rhythm action games are where it’s at. In Taiko no Tatsujin Pop Tap Bea‪t, it’s you and your thumbs against everything from J-pop to the William Tell Overture. The entire thing is gloriously demented tappy fun – although you won’t see much of the on-screen madness when zeroed in on the note markers!

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Easy Come Easy Golf

In everything but name, Easy Come Easy Golf is an Everybody’s Golf game for Apple Arcade, marking the end of developer Clap Hanz’s long exclusivity deal with PlayStation. But don’t expect an inferior knockoff. Like its predecessors, the infectiously cheerful Easy Come Easy Golf hits that perfect sweet spot between arcade and simulation golf, while the new touch controls arguably make hitting a great shot even more satisfying.

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Fantasian

When it comes to RPGs, names don’t come much bigger than Hironobu Sakaguchi, best known for being the man who created Final Fantasy. His latest game, Fantasian, is an unashamedly old-school JRPG (you’d better believe there are random battles), but stands out from the crowd thanks to its wholly unique visual style, which uses stunning handcrafted dioramas to form its game world.

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Sneaky Sasquatch

Like Yogi Bear meets Metal Gear, Sneaky Sasquatch has you play as the titular hairy chap, who steals grub, hides from rangers, and acquires exciting new possessions from a kleptomaniac raccoon. It’s joyful stuff, from how Sasquatch messily stuffs his face, to the beautifully realised way he tiptoes around humans.

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Grindstone

Recalling long-dead iPhone classic Dungeon Raid, Grindstone is a match game where you draw a snaking path to remove items from the board. Only here, a brute-like hero scythes his way through hordes of bloodthirsty creeps. As you work your way up a mountain, increasingly intricate layouts demand think-ahead tactics.

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What The Golf?

Mini-golf? Yawn. But wait, because What The Golf? goes weird almost instantly, with the golfer flying through the air instead of the ball. Later, you send an entire clubhouse towards the hole, and the ball thinks its Spider-Man, swinging from walls. If that doesn’t make you chuckle, you’re deader than a ball in the rough.

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Little Orpheus

There’s more than a whiff of Limbo and Inside in Little Orpheus. You spend much of your time hot-footing it, occasionally pausing to fashion a pathway forwards or avoid a terrifying enemy. But this game’s dazzling imagery of a world beneath the Earth’s surface combined with its wonderful voiceovers make it worth exploring.

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Card of Darkness

This combination of Rogue-like adventuring and cards (illustrated by Adventure Time artist Pendleton Ward) demands you balance risk and reward. You flip cards to grab bling but need to clear entire stacks to progress. Lack health/weaponry to do so and you’re dead. It’s thinky brilliance, with speedy levels that let you crack on in short bursts.

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Super Impossible Road

Roads? Pfft. Cars? Whatever. In this racing game, you coax a metal ball along a roller-coaster track stretching into space. In time-attack challenges and competitive races alike, ‘cheating’ by leaping between sections of track can get you ahead – assuming you don’t mess up and hurl your ball (and ego) into the abyss.

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The Last Campfire

Can a flame be rekindled? That’s the aim here, as a lost ember searches for home, helping bring light to the Forlorn – creatures in abject despair. That might sound a miserable experience, but The Last Campfire is a beguiling game of puzzles within puzzles, brimming with ideas, beautiful visuals, and moments of joy and hope.

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Sayonara Wild Hearts

Described as an interactive pop album, Sayonara Wild Hearts is a blisteringly fast and ballsy rhythm action romp of bikes, lasers, neon and dance battles that whiff of Rez with a serious injection of speed. You’ll fumble without a controller, but with one in your hands will find this the most exhilarating of Apple Arcade titles.

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Spyder

Think it’d be cool to be James Bond crossed with Spider-Man crossed with a robot? The snag is you’re the size of a spider as you skitter around surfaces, using gadgets to slice through panels, flip switches and cunningly ruin the plans of nefarious types who don’t even know you’re there. Just avoid getting whacked by a newspaper.

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Mutazione

The real trick with point-and-click adventures is to immerse you in another world. Mutazione nails this as you direct Kai, visiting relatives in an isolated community mutated after an asteroid strike. It’s gentle, meandering and full of minutiae. But if the quiet worldbuilding doesn’t win you over, in-game custom generative musical gardens just might.

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Bleak Sword

This tense, tight brawler has you fend off all manner of blocky foes that appear to have escaped from a ZX81. One-finger controls at first flummox, and you’ll yearn for a gamepad. But stay the course and your deft digit will let you roll, parry and give a seemingly endless gang of menacing guardians a serious thrashing.

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App Store greats and timeless classics

April 2021. Apple finds a bunch of App Store classics down the back of the sofa. Idea! IAPs are hacked out with a spoon, a few titles get an extra lick of paint, and the resulting concoctions are squirted into Apple Arcade, further ramping up its value. Job done!

Here are the best of those oldies-but-goodies. (Deep breath…)

From ‘badlands’ to snowy mountains…

Badland+: Use one thumb to guide a flapping critter through a forest suspiciously packed full of terrifying traps.

Blek+ (depicted): Draw living scribbles to scoop up the dots in a gorgeous mix of Pac-Man, puzzling and penmanship.

Dead Cells+: Fight your way across procedurally generated 2D worlds, increasing your chances each time with permanent character upgrades.

DoDonPachi Rescurrection HD+: Avoid all the death! Shoot all the things! Fight massive bosses! You’ll be in bullet-hell heaven in this legendary vertically scrolling shooter.

Downwell+: Venture deep into the darkness, grabbing bling and blowing up monsters by way of your ‘gunboots’.

Goat Simulator+: Cause as much destruction as possible in this mash-up of absurd physics, open-world gameplay, and being a really annoying goat.

Grand Mountain Adventure+: Explore open-world mountains in this top-down ski-’em-up, all without getting remotely chilly.

From impossible worlds to impossible geometry…

Gris+ (depicted): Dive into a visually arresting hand-painted world of platforms and puzzles to help a woman regain her lost voice.

Hidden Folks+: Search for the titular hidden folks in animated and noisy hand-drawn interactive scenes.

INKS+: Hit targets that blast coloured paint splats across a minimalist canvas in this puzzle-oriented precision take on pinball.

Kingdom Two Crowns+: Recruit villagers and build by day and then fend off monsters by night, in this tense, compelling strategy title.

Knotwords+: Power up your crossword brain with puzzles that give you all the letters, but task you with correctly arranging them, against the clock.

Limbo+: Battle a terrifying monochrome hell in a bleak, unnerving slice of classic platform puzzling where you die over and over again. 

Love You To Bits+: Find your lost love in a point-and-clicker packed full of pop-culture references and heart.

Mini Metro+: Watch underground maps come alive as you draw lines between stations to keep the network from overloading.

Monument Valley+: Guide Ida through a world of Escher architecture and grumpy Crow People, uncovering mysteries. And then play the sequel.

From Viking heroes to gnomes saving the galaxy…

Oddmar+ (depicted): Guide a shunned Viking to redemption by leaping about, grabbing gold, jumping on enemies and surviving terrifying boss battles.

Osmos+: Fight for survival, absorbing rivals in scenes that scale from gloopy petri-dish battles to celestial arenas.

Prune+: Urge trees towards the light and avoid deadly orbs in an abstract gardening game that’s a bit of a grower.

Really Bad Chess+: Break your chess brain with a take that has one AI level, and so balances games by mixing up starting pieces.

Reigns+: Swipe left! Swipe right! No, you’re not dating – you’re ruling a kingdom. And every decision matters.

Samorost 3+: Assist a spacefaring gnome on a quest to deal with a mad monk, in this endearing and beautiful old-school adventure.

Retro Goal+: Lead your team to glory in this streamlined mix of management and touch-friendly interactive highlights.

From wordplay to wingplay…

SpellTower+: Draw lines on a letter grid to create words and watch tiles tumble. Too easy? Take on rising towers and timers too.

Splitter Critters+ (depicted): Carve up the screen with a finger and rearrange the pieces to guide critters to their UFO. It’s Lemmingsmeets Fruit Ninja.

Stardew Valley+: Get back down to earth in a quite literal sense, in this game about growing food, tending your farm, and living life.

The Gardens Between+: Manipulate time in a dazzling, award-winning puzzle game about memories, friendship, and fate.

The Room Two+: Discover puzzles within puzzles in this mysterious and beautifully designed tactile classic.

Threes+: Swipe to combine numbers in a claustrophobic grid. Grin at the personality. Wonder why you ever wasted time on 2048.

Time Locker+: Shoot all of the things! And cunningly make use of the world only moving when you do. But stay ahead of the ravenous void.

Tiny Wings+: Help a bird stay ahead of sunset by sliding down hills and soaring into the air, or race siblings for the prize of the biggest fish.

Profile image of Craig Grannell Craig Grannell Contributor

About

I’m a regular contributor to Stuff magazine and Stuff.tv, covering apps, games, Apple kit, Android, Lego, retro gaming and other interesting oddities. I also pen opinion pieces when the editor lets me, getting all serious about accessibility and predicting when sentient AI smart cookware will take over the world, in a terrifying mix of Bake Off and Terminator.

Areas of expertise

Mobile apps and games, Macs, iOS and tvOS devices, Android, retro games, crowdfunding, design, how to fight off an enraged smart saucepan with a massive stick.