Adventure / Narrative Games for Mobile / Touch
Point-and-click and interactive fiction that prioritise story over reflex. Verified for Touch — tap, swipe, pinch.
About This Combination
Narrative games in the browser have had a genuine renaissance since 2018 driven partly by Itch.io and partly by the resurgence of interactive fiction toolkits (Twine, Ink). The best ones sit quietly at the edge of the medium: they are essays that talk back, or horror films you can pause, or confessionals where you choose which details to hear. They are also the genre least well-served by YouTube recommendations, because they can't be streamlined — the experience is private, textual, and resistant to the camera.
Device Notes for Mobile / Touch
Mobile touch is where browser games face their most hostile environment and their largest audience simultaneously. A 375px wide viewport, no hover state, variable touch latency (15ms on a Pixel 8, 65ms on a budget Android), and a browser chrome that eats screen real estate. Games that work well here have been designed for it from the start — not ported from desktop. Bramwell tests on three devices: iPhone SE (small screen), Samsung A54 (mid-range Android), and iPad Air (tablet touch). A game that passes all three is genuinely cross-device.
Compatibility
iOS Safari 16.4+ handles most WebGL. Android Chrome 110+. Firefox on iOS uses WebKit and behaves identically to Safari.
Screen Notes
Minimum 320px. Avoid games requiring hover states. Virtual joysticks add ~40ms latency on most implementations.
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Adventure / Narrative accessories for Mobile / Touch
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