Best Horror Games On Itch.io – July 2026
By Adele Wilson
Across a bounty of subgenres.Haze Seas Accessories Tier List [Best Accessories to Equip]
By Adele Wilson
The accessories with the best stat buffs in Haze Seas.
Organization: Backflip Studios
Backflip Studios’ Ferno is Your Next Mobile Addiction
By Jim Squires
Picking hit mobile games is a lot like picking race horses, and if I were a betting man I’d put my money on Ferno, the just-launched high score chaser from Backflip Studios. The premise behind Ferno is simple enough. Just drag your finger …Dwarven Den Walkthrough
By Nadia Oxford
Dwarven Den is a puzzle / mining game from Backflip Studios. In this game, you dig through mines filled with rock, sand, and soil to reach specific goals. If you run out of energy before you meet those goals, however, you're done for. Gamezebo's strategy guide will provide you with some tips and hints that will help you dig for fun and profit.Dwarven Den Review
By Nadia Oxford
Dwarves and dogs have one thing in common: Both love to dig. It's possible both enjoy lifting their legs on fire hydrants too, but we'll never know for sure. Dwarves would rather talk about gold and gems than how and where they relieve themselves.Dwarven Den is a puzzle / mining game from Backflip, the studio behind the long popular DragonVale dragon breeding simulator. Unlike DragonVale, Dwarven Den is fast-paced and action-oriented. It's creative, it's challenging, and it's satisfying to play (games that revolve around digging usually are). That said, its free-to-play trappings, though minimal, may frustrate some players.The action in Dwarven Den takes place underground (naturally). A single dwarf begins a quest to dig out and rescue some relatives that are trapped in crystals. Oh, and he pockets whatever loot he digs up on his quest, of course. Finders keepers.NinJump Rooftops Review
By Joe Jasko
NinJump Rooftops brings us back to a time when the App Store was just starting out, and simple timewaster games like Doodle Jump and Can Knockdown ruled the mobile scene. In fact, Backflip Studios' own NinJump used to be the talk of the town around these parts in 2010. However, it's not 2010 anymore, and with so much gameplay innovation and graphical prowess shaping the world of mobile gaming as we know it today, can these basic little timewaster games still hold a place in our age of high-end graphics and deeply immersive gameplay?Much like everything else in NinJump Rooftops, the concept is simple: you are a ninja, and you have to run along the endless rooftops, while avoiding hazards and taking out enemies with your ninja jump attacks. The controls are equally simple, with one tap anywhere on the screen corresponding to making your ninja jump, a second tap entering into a double jump, and holding down on the screen increasing the height of your jump. The gameplay itself is of the sidescrolling endless runner variety, and Backflip Studios uses some pretty nice 3D visuals to bring the world to life (although your scenery will be strictly limited to the Asian-inspired rooftops, and there's never much of a variety no matter how far you manage to make it during any one of your runs)."So you'll be running and jumping as par for the course, and picking up tons of gold coins along the way which you can use to buy power-ups that give you an extra added edge. The power-ups are also standard endless runner fare, with magnet boosts that draw surrounding coins towards you, and a big blue rocket that lifts you up and saves you if you happen to fall. You'll also be met with your fairly typical in-game goals, such as "Collect X amount of coins over time" or "Run X amount of meters in a single run." Completing these objectives will net you more additional coins, which can then be used to buy more power-ups, and so on.Gizmonauts Review
By Jim Squires
Backflip Studios has released more than its fair share of iOS games, but none have managed to be quite as big a hit as DragonVale. This fantastical spin on free-to-play zoo gaming single-handedly birthed the dragon zoo genre, and to this day remains one of the top grossing games on the App Store. So when we learned that Backflip was going to be delivering a new free-to-play zoo-style experience, but this time in the world of robots, we were pretty excited to see what would come of it.Gizmonauts Walkthrough
By Dant Rambo
Developed by Backflip Studios, Gizmonauts is a social-sim that puts players in charge of a floating island filled with robots. You'll build a variety of different "Bots", assemble all sorts of buildings for them, and even pit them against one another in battle. Gamezebo's quick start guide will provide you with detailed images, tips, information, and hints on how to play your best game.Paper Toss Friends Review
By Nadia Oxford
The first Paper Toss game was released in 2009, around the time the US economy started to smell like a carton of milk parked behind a furnace. The game simply involved pitching wads of paper into a wastebasket, but the quiet ring of phones and muted chatter of your digital co-workers in the background turned Paper Toss into a means of relieving work stress during a time when sneezing wrong could get you kicked out of your real-world job. The economy has since improved a little bit, but there are still reasons to lose yourself in slacker fantasies. Paper Toss Friends isn't very different from its predecessors, but it doesn't have to be. We'll never lose our inborn love for pitching trash with style.Gizmonauts Preview
By Dant Rambo
There are two important things to know about robot fighting: it's awesome, and it's expensive. The latter tends to take away from the former, of course, but there are ways around it. You could glue wheels to a blender and proclaim it a battling machine, for instance. If your imagination is not that vivid and/or you'd rather not disrespect the sacred bond between human and household appliance, Gizmonauts can help.