If you're like me, you only play Android games that don't require any commitment. However, finding such games is surprisingly difficult, so I've rounded up fifteen of my favorite games that you can just jump right in and play for a couple of minutes at a time.
QS Monkey Land: King of Fruits is essentially a Suika (Watermelon Game) clone. It's an endless puzzle game where fruits drop into a container. Your goal is to match two of the same fruits to get a larger fruit. The largest fruit is the watermelon, and you can combine two watermelons to make them disappear and free up some space.
Although there's no time limit, you can time your fruit drops because the container is affected by gravity. This deceptively simple game involves a lot of skill and thinking. I still haven't matched two watermelons, even after two months of playing.
There are many endless runners perfect for quick sessions on the toilet, but my favorite is Alto's Adventure. Its gorgeous, minimalistic graphics and interface are a breath of fresh air compared to other endless runners, such as Subway Surfers. Your character automatically snowboards to the right, and you control the character by tapping and holding to jump or maneuver.
Unlike Ski Safari, where you're trying to escape an avalanche, in Alto's Adventure, you lose when you fall. This means that most runs are short. You progress by doing fun mini-challenges to level up.
Horizon Chase pays homage to old-school Nintendo and Sega arcade racers like Lotus and Top Gear. This modernized retro racer has you blazing through tracks at neckbreak speeds, so most races are incredibly short. Although the cars aren't licensed, they look just like the real deal.
I played Fallout Shelter back when it was first released in 2015 (shortly before Fallout 4), and it's been my favorite base-building simulator on mobile ever since. The goal is
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