Best Horror Games On Itch.io – July 2026
By Adele Wilson
Across a bounty of subgenres.Grow A Garden 2 Base Price List
By Meriel Green
What's the most valuable crop?Evomon Types Guide [Strengths, Weaknesses, Resistance]
By Adele Wilson
Your companion guide during battles.
iOS Reviews
Nimble Quest Review
By Eli Cymet
With Nimble Quest, NimbleBit had nothing to prove, but a lot to gain. Earlier releases Pocket Frogs, Tiny Tower, and Pocket Planes had cemented the indie trio as masters of time management, and a studio to watch. That their next title would be a quality release was almost a foregone conclusion. And yet, from the earliest leaks to the most recent footage, this game stuck out as the biggest departure yet from the company's tried-and-true compulsion loop. A chance to show that NimbleBit wasn't a one-genre wonder. A chance I'm very glad they took.PUK Review
Sometimes it's the simple pleasures that are best, like popping bubble wrap. PUK is one such game, with a simple repetitive action that turns out to be far more fun and satisfying than it has any right to be.Phenomenon: Meteorite Review
By John Anthony
No one has ever seen a falling meteor and thought "now there's a good omen!". The residents of Meteorite Island certainly didn't, and years after the event they still struggle with clan disputes and unexplained events. Phenomenon: Meteorite places you in the shoes of Daniel, a young man whose destiny is to find his parents, dig into the island's past, and see if he can restore peace to its people once again.Abalone Review
By Matt Thrower
Abstract board games are amongst the oldest entertainments devised by humanity. And despite the dominance of ancient classics like Chess and Go, abstracts are still being designed and produced in the modern age. Abalone is one such, originally released in 1987, and now taking the jump to the iPad.Secrets of the Dark: Mystery of the Ancestral Estate Review
Spooky mansions have long been the bailiwick of mystery writers, but for a while now, hidden object games have been horning in on their territory. Secrets of the Dark: Mystery of the Ancestral Estate is set inthe villa of a family of inventors who, aside from inventing bizarre contraptions, spend their time trying to stop one of their psycho siblings from taking over the world. Although the game stumbles at both beginning and end, in between it presents some unusual and fascinating gameplay.Mini Golf MatchUp Review
By Jim Squires
Do you remember Words With Friends? Sure you do! You're still playing games inspired by it to this very day -- and I'm not necessarily talking about word games, either. Draw Something, Song Pop, Hero Academy; despite their wildly different play mechanics, all of these games share a common bond: push-based multiplayer.Nitro Review
By Rob Rich
Know what I miss? Arcade-style racing games. It seems like these days everyone's focused on realism and simulations. That's why it's fairly refreshing to jump into Nitro and blaze through a few laps; it's not exactly brimming with power-ups or cartoon characters, but it's less focused on the real world and much more interested in slightly wacky fun. And chibi cars.The Croods Review
By Nadia Oxford
The Croods is an animated family movie from Dreamworks. One of its main characters is Grug, a prehistoric patriarch who is terrified by the new world that's evolving beyond the mouth of his cave. Despite the bouts of paranoia he suffers through the film, Grug looks completely happy and at ease in Rovio's game adaptation of The Croods. That's because The Croods for iOS is as unimaginative and unchanging as a social farming sim gets.