Stuff UK

Clash of plans

Apple Arcade

What’s the story?

Apple succeeded in gaming seemingly by mistake. From the dawn of the iPhone, it blundered along, annoying developers with oddball App Store review decisions, making a mess of controller support and setting fire to Game Center. Race-to-the-bottom pricing created a mobile gaming landscape filled with freemium tat – and too few people ever discovered the rare gems.

The idea that this could all be fixed with Apple Arcade was met with scepticism – even derision. But Apple really has made a swish premium gaming service that seamlessly works across iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple TV. Games work offline, support controllers, use iCloud to sync progress, and aren’t on other subscription services – nor Android. Given that it costs just a fiver a month for a family subscription, it sounds too good to be true…

Is it any good?

In a word, yes. But not just in a “We’ll give Apple a grudging pass” manner, nor a “This will do until we get some proper games” way. Apple Arcade is a showcase for the best in mobile gaming – and everything’s new. You don’t get a reheated selection of old games (although there is the odd sequel), but over 100 titles you won’t have played before.

Doubtless some will grumble at the lack of AAA fare, but that’s kind of the point. Arcade is

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Stuff UK

Stuff UK1 min read
Almost Great…
This boxy instant took 500 film and was one of the last times Polaroid used a folding SLR design. The prints popped out of a window. Manufactured by toy brand Tomy, the i-Zone was one of the best-selling cameras of its era. Its 1.5x1in images came on
Stuff UK3 min read
The Old Guard
Apple’s most specced-out phone zooms further, feels lighter, looks sleeker and upgrades the power to almost games console levels: if you haven’t seen Resident Evil Village running on it, you’re missing out. But it’s also a mighty expensive option, so
Stuff UK1 min read
Tablets
from £599 / go.stuff.tv/iPadAir This tablet has enough power to rival the flagship iPad Pro – and even quite a few recent MacBooks. And though you might need to add a keyboard, a stylus and even a gamepad to make the most of it, the latest Air reinfo

Related Books & Audiobooks