Game category
Arcade game UI references
Browse 5 public games in the Arcade category on Flomob. Compare real mobile UI and UX patterns, studio credits, and screen previews from titles you can study without signing in.
Use this Arcade game library to benchmark onboarding, menus, progression, and monetization patterns side by side. Each public game page links to representative screens so you can understand what makes a arcade title feel polished—then adapt those principles to your own product.
Mobile game UI · UX patterns · Game references · Arcade patterns · Public previews
Chicken Jump: Crazy Traffic
Playdigious
Open the public reference page to explore creators, categories, and design inspiration for Chicken Jump: Crazy Traffic.
Downwell
Devolver
Open the public reference page to explore creators, categories, and design inspiration for Downwell.
Eggy Party
NetEase Games
Open the public reference page to explore creators, categories, and design inspiration for Eggy Party.
Geometry Dash Lite
RobTop Games
Open the public reference page to explore creators, categories, and design inspiration for Geometry Dash Lite.
Magic Tiles 3: Piano Game
Amanotes
Open the public reference page to explore creators, categories, and design inspiration for Magic Tiles 3: Piano Game.
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Frequently asked questions
What can I learn from Arcade game UI references on Flomob?
You can compare how arcade titles structure navigation, rewards, and core loops, then translate those UX decisions into your own mobile game or app.
Do I need an account to browse public Arcade games?
No. Public game and screen previews are available without login. Create a free account when you want to save favorites and unlock the full library.
How should teams use Arcade references without copying?
Treat each reference as a benchmark for clarity, hierarchy, and interaction patterns—not as artwork to duplicate.
How to benchmark this category
Compare several games in this category to spot recurring UX patterns, interaction priorities, and content hierarchy choices.
Pick 3-5 references, note what repeats across successful examples, then adapt those principles to your own product requirements.