Best PC games on Android

You would be amazed at the crossover betweenthe Play Stores best appsand PC, given how antithetical the two platforms can seem. PC’s processing and graphical capabilities coupled with complex physical controls seems to come from a different planet toyour new and improved gaming phone. Mobile development has gained such power and popularity that their inclusion on other platforms was inevitable, from refined experiences like Downwell to the many manyquality Vampire Survivors clonesthat take over your life for brief periods of time. We’d like to share our favorite Android games that have made the leap to PC, for their peerless dedication, graphical quality, and immense popularity among Android and PC gamers alike.

1Punch Club

This 2D brawler follows an 80s Rocky-movie-style aspiring martial artist, except there are no training montages; you have to bulk the old-fashioned way. Punch Club’s gameplay offers RPG life sim mechanics such as eating healthy and regular exercise to train your character as a martial artist. The brawls take place in various pixel art streets and arenas that look great on Android and even better on PC. The combat presents a serviceable and punishing 2D brawler, utilizing your equipped special moves to gain an edge in combat. The RPG gameplay grants a unique mundanity to the idea of street fighting. The game converts the less exciting aspects of this kind of story, like money, diet, and employment, into engaging gameplay. If intense RPG gameplay is up your street,Punch Club (on Steam)is a solid contender to keep you happy, provided you never get tired of 80s pop culture references.

Downwell is an energetic rogue-lite that sports an Undertale-esque black and white pallet and immediately throws you down a well. Players are tasked with descending at all costs, blasting rocks and enemies to bits with unorthodox, but highly effective gun shoes. The gameplay is simple in the best way; your guns explode downwards with satisfying percussion and brutal efficiency. Plus, everything beneath you probably deserves it. As you descend, you’ll find side caves containing random upgrades, from health improvements to increased firepower, after which it’s back into the fray.Downwell (on Steam)focuses on gameplay engagement rather than narrative, ensuring that moving down feels inherently satisfying, which enhances the game’s destructive charm. The random upgrade system provides significant replay value, and the PC version allows for tighter controls for your runs. Put all this together, and you get an experience that definitely goes downwellnicely.

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3Vampire Survivors

Vampire Survivors pioneered an insanely addictive gameplay loop that combines idle bullet hell gameplay with rogue-like elements. Move around and expand your destructive capabilities to combat the constantly increasing enemy threat. Graphically, the game is charming in a low-res kind of way and the enemies are fun to blow away even without the creative upgrades. The difficulty does ramp up quickly, swapping out weaker enemies for tougher ones, which can end your runs quickly. But it’s so easy to fire Vampire Survivors back up again that losing barely hurts at all. Plus, different maps and regular updates keep things fresh. For a game that received so little fan fair upon release, Vampire Survivors is too good to pass up.

4Dead Cells

A long-standing rouge-like success story, Dead Cells presents Metroivania-style explorative gameplay with the added spice of punishing combat and permadeath. The game is crushingly difficult, forcing players to take advantage of a slew of deadly weapons and abilities to progress. Explore the procedurally generated maps, locate upgrades, and use them to dominate the enemy ranks in every unique rogue-like run. As seen in our souls-like roundup, tough games need responsive controls to feel fair, and Dead Cells has you covered with razor-sharp inputs and excellent controller support. The game combines intricate visual design with a superior framerate to create beautiful environments that feel great to explore. Given its high-octane combat, pretty visuals, content-rich DLC, and regular updates, Dead Cells lives up to its reputation.

5Hitman GO: Definitive Edition

Given the Hitman franchise’s reputation for punishing stealth gameplay and gun-toting action, the primary loop ofHitman GO Definitive Edition (on Steam)may surprise you. Players control an Agent 47 miniature on a game board, tasked with taking out every other person on the board. The Monopoly aesthetic is very disarming if one knows the series, but funnily enough, the core elements of classic Hitman gameplay remain unchanged. Since you are supposed to kill without being spotted, you have to be strategic about who you kill first. Your targets are chess pieces that don’t move unless prompted, so the task is to plan the best route around the board, picking off the targets one by one. This becomes bizarrely engaging and highlights how fun Hitman gameplay can be when brought back to basics.

6Riptide: GP Renegade

This is a game thatneededto be on PC.Riptide GP Renegade (on Steam)is a third-person jet skiing racer that takes place in an intriguing futuristic setting. The plot is less engaging than the gameplay, unsurprisingly. You’ll spend most of your time speeding around city environments and reliving that first time you played on a racing arcade machine. Races have you riding over water and performing tricks for a higher score, with part customization options for maximizing your vehicle’s speed, maneuverability, and style. Given the game’s frequent sharp turns, the PC upgrade is a huge improvement for the larger screen. The game already looks fantastic on Android, and PC just enhances it. If racing games interest you, Riptide GP Renegade doesn’t cut corners.

7Slay the Spire

Slay the Spire presents new players with a hulking challenge, to climb and defeat hordes of enemies in an ever-adapting roguelike experience. Players build decks of various functions to aid you in combat; choose the build that works for you and ascend the spire. The spire challenges players with sequences of randomly generated tiered combat encounters that test them every step of the way. The combat itself resembles classic menu-centric, turn-based battles which incentivize clever use of the players selected card build to exploit the weaknesses of enemies as they grow steadily stronger; taking advantage of relics found along the way to enhance a build’s potency.

8Levelhead

If you’re in the mood for a funny, high-pace puzzle platformer,Levelhead (on Steam) fits the bill. Players must deliver packages as a testing exercise for a robot prototype designed for a galaxy-wide postal service. Movement and combat mechanics are appealingly smooth and elegant, bouncing on enemy heads Mario-style while exploring colorful alien worlds. The puzzle mechanics centralize around your package, using it to weigh down switches and as a platform, and even attack enemies. Hope there’s nothing fragile in there. The game also features an in-depth level creator and editor, allowing players to publish their own levels and play others, in addition to a tower mode that provides a greater challenge. If you’re looking for something to fill the Super Meat Boy hole in your life, Levelhead delivers.

9ScourgeBringer

One of the many manygreat Metroidvania gameson the Play Store, ScourgeBringer is a neat little title that marries the genre’s traditional explorative gameplay with a rogue-like twist. The player takes the role of theScourgeBringer (on Steam), a hero investigating the interior of a relic that has fallen to earth. You’ll be exploring the different biomes and cutting through enemies. Combat makes use of aggressive and stylish sword combos while making use of gunplay. The best of both worlds. The rogue-like elements conflict slightly with the Metroidvania-level design, encouraging the player to blast through to the end. Health is lost easily and recovering it is infrequent to discourage in-depth exploration. But if Blasphemous won you over with its punishing gameplay, ScourgeBringer will scratch that same itch.

10Out There: Omega

If you’ve ever played FTL: Faster than Light,Out There: Omega (on Steam)will feel very familiar. The gameplay, end goal, and tone are more or less the same. You are lost in space and need to travel across the galaxy, mining fuel and other resources to survive. The biggest difference between the two is the graphic quality. Out There: Omega presents stunning backdrop art for the various planets you explore and the beauty of deep space. The defining mechanic of Out There: Omega is the role-playing aspect. Every run is random, and events can play out differently every time. While this game is perfect for mobile, given its simplicity, the PC port allows a more laid-back experience. For a low-fi resource management experience and atmospheric test of judgment, Out There: Omega is a no-brainer.

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Collage of screenshots from Punch Club, Riptide: GP Renegade, Out There: Omega Edition, and Hitman GO: Definitive Edition