Skip to main content

Let the GIF games begin — Giphy Arcade lets you build micro games with stickers

GIFs are no longer just fodder for messaging and social interactions — with Giphy Arcade, GIFs are building blocks for custom arcade games. Launched on Wednesday, October 16, Giphy Arcade lets users design their own games using animated stickers, then share and play without an app download.

Recommended Videos

The Giphy Arcade Remix allows you to choose a type of game — like running and jumping over obstacles or shooting bricks — and customize the game by filling in the characters with GIFs. For example, you can create a game where a burger has to jump over a barbecue grill. Game designers can also choose their own backgrounds and old-school arcade music.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The games are designed from the new Arcade web app, which means there’s no app download required to design or play. Any device with an internet connection and web browser supports the microgames. Because the games are simply selecting a type and filling in the characters, the games can be designed in a few clicks with no code or design experience necessary.

If you don’t want to design your own games, the Giphy Arcade houses Giphy-designed microgames to play from a web browser. Like GIFs, Giphy games are short and sweet — the company says they are designed to be played in a few seconds. If you want to play for more than a few seconds, the Giphy Arcade home page also has game collections curated into playlists for longer play.

Of course, GIFs are social creatures — and Giphy games are also designed to be shared with friends. Games can be shared using a custom link (like this one), which allows the games to spread on social networks as well as in texts and emails without downloading an app.

“When exploring what games could look like for Giphy, we knew the experience had to be quick, sharable, and accessible for everyone, including people who don’t necessarily have a history with gaming,” Nick Santaniello, senior product engineer at Giphy, said. “With Giphy Arcade, we’ve created an experience that not only provides instant fun for the player, but also a new way to add personalized expression and entertainment to conversations as they’re happening.”

Giphy Arcade launched on Wednesday, October 16, including games from launch partner Wendy’s — so you can play a version of the classic Breakout, but with chicken nuggets.

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
If you want to up your Tekken 8 game, try this stickless controller
Kuma hitting Law causing him to fly toward the screen in Tekken 8.

With the release of Tekken 8, I’ve been at a bit of a crossroads. I had no clue what controller I wanted to use to learn and beat the rest of the competition. A standard Xbox controller? PlayStation’s DualSense? A fightstick? Or maybe it's time I looked to the future and tried out a hitbox controller? That last option is the one I'd ultimately go with, thanks to the Razer Kitsune.

Released last year, the Razer Kitsune is a hitbox-style fighting gamepad with no joystick. Its selling point is that it is sleeker than most hitbox controllers on the market and features high-quality buttons. It's a great option for those who love that style of control, but don't love carrying around a big, boxy gamepad. The true question, though, was whether or not I would prefer it over a classic gamepad, my Tekken comfort zone. I decided to take on a fighting game gauntlet with a day of matches with my little brother in just about every fighter I own to find out.
What is a hitbox controller?
A hitbox controller is a stickless arcade pad. It retains all the classic attack buttons but replaces the directional stick with buttons. I would compare it to playing on a keyboard but with more comfortable buttons to press and the up button placed where your thumbs rest. You may have heard of it a few times due to the controversy it causes in the fighting game community over it being the “easy way” to play fighting games.

Read more
One of the Apple Vision Pro’s first games lets you play tabletop classics
Apple Vision Pro being worn by a person while using a keyboard.

Developer Resolution Games shared more details on Game Room, its launch title for the Apple Vision Pro that comes out alongside the headset on February 2.

As its name implies, Game Room is a collection of classic tabletop games like chess that Apple Vision Pro users will be able to try out in mixed reality. The Apple Vision Pro's spatial computing allows for a three-dimensional interface in which players can interact with game pieces or cards using just their hands. At launch, Game Room will include Chess, Solitaire, Hearts, Yacht, and Sea Battle (a take on Battleship), although its developers plan to add more games after launch.

Read more
One of my favorite 2022 games just came to Xbox Game Pass, and you need to try it
Arcade cabinets stand in a room in Arcade Paradise.

When I think back to 2022, there are a ton of critically acclaimed games that stick with me. Naturally, I spent countless hours adventuring through the Lands Between in Elden Ring. Splatoon 3 and Vampire Survivors ate up my entire summer, while I still think about Pentiment and Immortality months later. There's one lesser-known game, though, that was a go-to I kept coming back to throughout the year despite the fact that it wasn't talked about nearly as much as any of those games.

That would be Arcade Paradise, a quiet 2022 standout that's now available on Xbox Game Pass today. Developed by Nosebleed Interactive, it's a unique simulation game that balances 90s nostalgia with a thoughtful look at the line between hobby and work. If you spent any time during your youth hanging around arcades, you'll want to give it a try while it's on Game Pass.

Read more