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When it comes to gaming, mobile is no longer a dirty word. Sure, there are hundreds of pointless, cash-grabbing clones available for Android, but you can also play games full of imagination, and originality. The best Android games won’t just occupy your commute to work—they’ll take over your life, and you’ll want to play them at home on your sofa, too.

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Sorting through the endless lists of games on the Play Store to unearth the gems is arduous, but thankfully, we’ve done all the hard work for you. From 100-hour RPGs to quick puzzlers you can complete in 10-minute chunks, here are the best Android games you can play right now.

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Each month, we review a major new Android release in the hopes of finding new entries to this list. Some will make the cut, others won’t, but all the games we’ll review are at least worth knowing about. For the full list of the best Android games, turn to page 2.

April Android Game of the Month - Cultist Simulator

Short sentences, artistic portraits, mood music. Using just these three tools, Cultist Simulator creates a world in which you’re a famous painter one minute, drawing inspiration for your work from troubling dreams, and the next you’re sending a loyal disciple of your cult to assassinate a pesky police officer who’s learnt too much about your nighttime, spirit-summoning rituals.

In essence, all you’re doing in Cultist Simulator is laying down cards onto Action buttons to produce outcomes, but it feels like each run could go in a hundred different directions. You start with just one possible Action—‘Work’—but you’ll soon have ‘Dream’, ‘Study’, ‘Explore’ and ‘Talk’, which is the one I used to tell my follower to knock off the detective.

Your early moves are straightforward: placing a ‘Health’ card into the Work slot starts a day of manual labour, while putting it in the Study slot will produce another card, Vitality. Later, you can Study two Vitality cards to increase your overall health, and that might come in handy if you’re struck by disease and another Action button, Sickness, appears on the table, sucking in your Health cards.

These interactions quickly become complex. You’ll Explore book shops for old tomes, finding lore to found your cult. You’ll Dream about a strange tree that opens a door to immortality. The joy of Cultist Simulator comes from experimenting with different cards and actions, and as your number of cards expands into the dozens, you'll come up with a stream of ‘what if’ questions. What if you lock one of the followers you’ve recruited in a cupboard? What happens if you summon an undead spirit? What happens if you ignore the occult altogether, and just try to make your way up the ladder in a law firm?

I didn’t enjoy my first few hours with it. It puts you under constant pressure to raise funds, to watch your health, to stave off Dread cards that haunt your dreams and can eventually spell Game Over. It doesn’t explain its systems very well—it has no tutorial—and there’s no easy way to keep track of what cards you’ve come across, so I forgot the outcome of combinations I’d already tried. I felt rudderless for my first five runs, unsure about what to do next, or even what my final goal was.

But when I started analysing every interaction, and accepted that I was going to fail, I was hooked. During one run I hit the pause button and clicked on every card on the table, clueless about how I could avoid catastrophe. And then a particularly poignant piece of writing caught my eye, shoving me down a new rabbit hole of possible interactions. You never get more than a snippet of story at a time, but every sentence hides a deeper meaning, and sends my thoughts down five different trails.

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I love piecing together the significance of a rare card, especially when the same character or old book appears in a later run. You can ‘win’ by reaching one of its positive endings—most runs will end in failure—but that’s not the point of Cultist Simulator. The point is gradually unravelling its secrets, it’s experimenting with each of its nine different cults, and revelling in the writing that an unusual card combination produces. Each run feels unique, aided by Legacies that will appear after one run ends. These Legacies determine your starting position next time, turning you into a detective, or young upstart with a vault of family money.

I can’t help feel that its scope makes it less suited to Android than other platforms. On PC, where it first came out last year, players are generally happy to spend a lot time looking at Wikis because chances are they’ll be playing for long stretches. But on Android, where play sessions are generally shorter, it’s easier to feel lost, and minimising the game to read a forum post is harder (I realise if you’re a tablet gamer that plays while lounging on your sofa, rather than on a work commute, this criticism might not apply).

The UI translates well to touchscreen, but playing on a phone can feel awkward at times. If you zoom in close enough to read the text on a card, you can’t get an overview of what else is on the table. If you zoom out to get a look at your options, the cards are too small to read. I was playing on my phone in landscape mode, and sometimes I couldn’t reach far enough with my thumb to drag and drop a card from one side of my screen to the other.

But these annoyances weren’t bad enough to sully my time with it. If you’re willing to move past a few hours of failure, and to learn from mistakes, Cultist Simulator is fascinating. Through its simple card game mechanics it will slowly draw you into a web of dread and dream worlds, of murder and intimidation, of old books and long-forgotten rituals. Once it caught me, I didn’t want to escape.

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Verdict

Dark and difficult, Cultist Simulator is a storytelling marvel—just don’t expect to understand it straightaway.

Price: £5.99/$6.99

Turn to page two for our pick of the top 45 best Android games to play right now...