The 10 Best Mobile Games of 2013
Maybe you’re an adult. Maybe that means you don’t want to be seen in public playing the same 3DS or Vita that your kids play. Or maybe you’re entirely comfortable with gaming in public and just prefer the ease and utility of your tablet or smartphone. Either way, there’s a good chance you’ve played mobile games this year. Modern technology has expanded where and how we play games, and also who plays them. For everybody who’s hopelessly obsessed with Candy Crush Saga, or waiting for the latest convoluted boardgame-to-tablet conversion, smartphones and tablets are just as important for playing games as they are for working or staying in touch with family and friends. 2013 was another great year for mobile games, and here are the 10 best we’ve played over the last 12 months.
10. Marvel Puzzle Quest Dark Reign
Here’s a neat trick. Take a series that has historically under-delivered, slap a license on it, and then adapt it from retail to a free-to-play model. Sounds like a recipe for disaster, right? But not only is Marvel Puzzle Quest Dark Reign a blast, it’s the first Puzzle Quest to crack its premise. It’s a match-3/RPG hybrid that delivers on both fronts.—Mitch Krpata
9. Joe Danger Touch
Joe Danger Touch feels so natural that you might assume it was made from the ground up for touch devices. Perhaps that is because in some ways it was. Developer Hello Games went back to the books with their popular racing/platforming franchise, taking many of the abilities, art assets and pieces of level design from Joe Danger and Joe Danger 2: The Movie and repurposing them into something that feels incredibly intuitive to swipe and tap through.—Luke Larsen
8. Impossible Road
We hate ourselves. It’s the only answer that makes sense. Why else would we play games like Impossible Road, where leaving your finger on the screen for a fraction of a second in either direction results in death? When did failure become this fun? Partially it’s the allure of the high score, and some of it’s the single-minded elegance of Kevin Ng’s design. The minimal aesthetic is also invaluable. Impossible Road is unforgiving in the most enjoyable way.—Garrett Martin
7. Device 6