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Cool Mac Indie Games

Indie games rule. Some of the best games out there aren’t even by the titans – they’re quirky, fun, and (phew) available for your Mac. Best of all, many of them don’t require you to empty out your wallet. Here’s a rundown of the indie games that we’re addicted to – all for (mostly) under $20. Discover the largest community for indie games and the people who make and play them. Join Game Jolt. Do you love games as much as we do? By signing up. Games Games Software Software. Hardware Hardware ® News Steam Labs. Browsing Horror Browse the newest, top selling and discounted Horror products on Steam. Adventure, Indie, Horror, Psychological Horror Showing 1-15 of 199 results Browse All Upcoming Releases. Narrow By Tag. Adventure 1,754. Action 1,260.

Over the years, I've played many games on my iPhone and iPad — top-tier titles, puzzlers, RPGs, and even a Pokémon-themed game or two — but the ones that captured my heart and playtime were often the tiny titles. These games may not have been from top game studios, but they brought heart, wit, and charm to my iPhone or iPad.

As we close out the year, I wanted to compile a list of my all-time favorite indie games on iOS: Some are no doubt familiar to you, while others might be a little more obscure, but I recommend you try them all.

Threes

The matching game that started a 2048-clone phenomenon, Threes brought smarts (and some great background music) to the puzzling genre.

Threes may be a game comprised of numbers, but you need no real mathematical skill to excel at this game — just an open mind and a penchant for thinking ahead.

Best of all, you can always find new paths to pursue, new tricks to test, and new methods for matching; the game is always different, though the numbers remain the same.


Alto's Adventure

The gorgeous backgrounds and meditative music alone catapult Alto's Adventure up the indie game ranks, but it's the game's sweet and witty premise — a herder-turned-snowboarder flies down the alps while rounding up llamas and angering local elders — combined with a great challenge system and an array of delightful unlockable characters that make it one of my favorite iOS games. With sequel Alto's Odyssey on the horizon, now is the perfect time to hit the slopes.

Mini Metro

Ding ding! If you've ever dreamed of redesigning your city's train lines, Mini Metro provides the perfect puzzler solution. The game's minimalist styling belies the complexity and delight of its many route options; like many of the other options on this list, it's provided hours of head-scratching fun — and the occasional power-trip — sometimes even while riding my town's real-life metro.

Desert Golfing

One stroke of meditative reflection on the golfing genre, three strokes puzzle game, and 3287 strokes of digital trolling make up Desert Golfing, a title that's both genius and endlessly frustrating. The premise is simple: Knock a golf ball into a procedurally-generated hole using the same sort of physics drag-and-swipe present in the Angry Birds franchise. The reality is a bit more complex: The game has no way to restart (save for deleting the entire app), no par requirements on holes, and no way to fail. And those aforementioned procedurally-generated holes? They're often exceedingly difficult — so much so that the developer himself never built a proper ending, trusting that two nigh-impossible holes in the 2000s and 3000s would stop all but the craziest players. (They didn't: Players have made it into the 60,000s.)

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And yet, despite its strange premise and execution, I keep coming back to Desert Golfing. Maybe it's because I want to see the 'evil' hole myself; maybe it's because the inherent physics puzzles, for all their trickery, still nag at my brain. Whatever my reason, I highly recommend finding your own by exploring this desert wasteland.

Twofold

Though Twofold was a relatively recent addition to my iPhone's home screen, it's clever enough to warrant inclusion on this list.

Tracing patterns for points is nothing new in the mobile game sphere, but Twofold puts a new spin on the style by taking away the stress of a timer, replaced instead by a finite number of lives and moves as you shift and trace your way to glory.

(Also, there's a cute robot. Did I mention that part?)


Choice of Robots

Speaking of robots… Want to build a robot army? Save the world from WWIII? Nes side scroller games. Become one with the singularity? Choice of Robots, a text-based choose-your-own adventure game offers a peek into several visions of the near future, beginning with the building of your very own intelligent robot. I love the world-building that went into this game, and its various stories have stuck with me in the years since I first played.


Sword and Sworcery

Sword and Sworcery is an adventure game with an eerie storyline, stick-figure characters, and a soundtrack I still listen to at least once a week. Its 140-character story snippets are instantly shareable online, leading others into the mystery of the Megatome and the Trigon Trifecta.


Monument Valley

Another puzzler with eerie visuals and a compelling tale, Monument Valley offers a variety of 3D maps to conquer — all while transporting you into a strange world of crows, block creatures, and breathtaking Escher-style landscapes.

It's one of the first titles I recommend to new mobile gamers, and no surprise that it was the most-mentioned game when I surveyed Twitter followers on their favorites.


Reigns

If robots, Escher, and sci-fi aren't up your alley, maybe you'll enjoy a choose-your-own adventure set amidst a fictional kingdom that puts a crown on your own head — at least, until you're brutally murdered by your own citizens, that is.

Or you drown in a frozen river.

Or you get murdered by a vengeful skeleton.

Or… maybe all of the above?

Reigns puts you into the boots of a king cursed by the devil, doomed to repeat his tenure in the bodies of the sons and vengeful successors who take his place; while attempting to find a way to lift the curse through many lifetimes, you'll also have to balance the needs of your kingdom with those of the church, military, and your own coffers.

You will make mistakes on your first playthrough (and probably fail to defeat the devil), but hey, that's okay — you can always start again. And again. And again.

Thomas Was Alone

I discovered this game originally at a friend's birthday party, when it was naught but a tiny title on the PS3; though we only played through a few levels, the plight of Thomas (a tiny rectangle) and his other shape-designated friends stuck in my head many months after that night.

When the game came to iOS in 2014, I was overjoyed — I could find out what happened, at last! — and not the least bit disappointed in its execution on the iPhone and iPad. Whether you play Thomas Was Alone on iOS, Mac, Windows, Xbox, or PlayStation, the story and game mechanics hold up.

Space Age

Blend together pixel art, 1950s space age fervor, and a reverent nostalgia for the games of the last century, and — if you've engaged the team from Big Bucket Studios to do it — you'll get Space Age.

Bound together with an ace soundtrack from Cabel Sasser, the game reminds me of some of the worst (AKA best) puzzles from RTS games of yore, including its epic final boss battle.

Super Stickman Golf

An oldie but a goodie, Super Stickman Golf was one of the first multiplayer games I ever played on my iPhone. Like Desert Golfing, it puts its own spin on the golf ball, but it's anything but minimalistic.

SSG's many levels (and those of its sequels) invite you to use ice balls to freeze lakes, sticky balls to hang from the top of floating islands, and Mulligan power-ups to avoid getting eaten by spinning wheels of death.

The courses are fun enough to play on their own, but add in the local multiplayer experience and you'll find yourself cursing your friends and competing for glory — all while playing a golfing game. What?

Spaceteam

The other local multiplayer game on my list, Spaceteam, isn't the prettiest title on this list. But I'll be damned if it's not one of the most amusing.

I mean, the concept alone is ridiculous: Multiple people get together, enable Spaceteam on their iPhone or iPad, then yell wacky-sounding terms to each other to try and keep their ship from being eaten by a dying sun or falling into a wormhole.

In practice, it's even better; I've played with friends, family, co-workers, and complete strangers, and every time has been whimsical and unique.

If you're already going to be yelling at your family the next time you see them, why not yell about switching off the Eigenthrottle?


The Room

Last but not least, I can't make a list of best indie games without including the mystifying (and creepy as hell) puzzler The Room. If you liked playing Myst in your childhood, the Room is the perfect multitouch progression for you; it offers complex box-related puzzles along with an atmospheric storyline and unsettling clues to the reality behind the madness.

Your favorite indie games?

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What have I missed? What's stayed on your home screen for years? Let me know below.

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Concepts everywhere

Another day, another iPhone 12 Pro concept. How much would you pay?

If reports are accurate we might be waiting a little while longer than normal for iPhone 12 Pro. But would you care if it looked like this?

When it comes to personal computers, the Mac has never been known as a gaming heavyweight: Apple doesn't focus on building machines that have the hard-core processing and graphics power you might find in, say, a Razor PC laptop.

That said, there are still a number of excellent games available to play on your Mac — especially of the indie variety. Two-person development teams and small studios shine on Apple's laptops and desktops, building stories with smart twists and heart-wrenching endings.

There have been many great indie titles for Mac over the years, especially with the advent of the Steam Store, but here are our all-time favorites.

Braid

I'm not generally the type to get overly invested in a game — I'm more of a book and movie person. But when I picked up Braid in 2009 after an off-hand recommendation from a friend, I found myself completely captivated by its mechanics and story.

On its face, Braid is a simple puzzle platformer: You play a man named Tim searching for a princess across the landscape of a strange world, encountering puzzles as you progress through each level. But the true delight of the game is in its controls: Not only can you run forward, jump, and the like — but you can rewind time at any moment, reversing your decisions and movements. It's a simple but beautiful mechanic and quickly becomes one of the primary ways you can solve the hardest puzzles; all the while, it makes you think about time and movement in a completely different way.

Years after its release, Braid is still considered a masterpiece — and it's not hard to see why. (If you can't — just rewind.)


Firewatch

We've said a lot about the magic of Firewatch on iMore over the last year, but the Campo Santo/Panic collaboration continues to merit praise. The 3D mystery and exploration game, which places you as a firewatch in a national park around the late 1980s, captures the essential beauty of being alone in the U.S. wilderness — and the eerieness factor, too. The voice acting here is also top-tier; this is a game that demands headphones and a wistful spirit.


Gone Home

Another entry in the first-person mystery genre, Gone Home puts you in the shoes of a student recently returned from a lengthy overseas trip to her family house, only to find it empty — with her younger sister apparently vanished. It's a wonderful example of the mystery and exploration genre, providing just enough of a creepy flair to keep you on the edge of your seat with just a few major jump-out scares.

For all of its intrigue, however, the game's core centers around family, ambition, and love — and paints those feelings with wrenching truths.

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Transistor

Modern RPGs are a dime a dozen, but none are painted in quite so stunning a manner as Transistor. Supergiant Games's sci-fi/action game sets you on a path through a futuristic electro-punk city with a mystical weapon and enemies to outwit and defeat. Though shorter than your average Final Fantasy entry, Transistor nevertheless captivates and offers great replay value with its quests and power-ups — though I'd settle for just exploring its beautifully rendered environments.


Stardew Valley

This was an outlier pick for our indie games list courtesy Mobile Nations video producer Justus Perry, but I have to admit that I quickly fell in love with it myself after a few hours. If you're a fan of simulation games but want a little more quirk and a little less 'send your Sim to work for the fortieth time' monotony, Stardew Valley offers you the chance to run your own pixelated farm, interact with the locals, defeat (or join forces with) a possibly evil corporation, explore caverns, and create all sorts of endless weird cooking experiments.

In a month where it's been hard to regularly read Facebook or Twitter, Stardew Valley is an appropriately delightful escape from the real world.


Cool

FTL: Faster Than Light

If you've ever dreamed of captaining a starship, it's hard not to love FTL. Subset Games's tactical strategy title puts you in the captain's chair on your way to save the galaxy — if you can make it through any number of insane and sometimes impossible challenges. And those, honestly, end up being the heart of the game: You become attached to your ship and crew — even when you end up accidentally killing them and having to start over.


Your favorite indie games for Mac?

What are your favorite indie games for the Mac? Let us know below!

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Concepts everywhere

Another day, another iPhone 12 Pro concept. How much would you pay?

If reports are accurate we might be waiting a little while longer than normal for iPhone 12 Pro. But would you care if it looked like this?