The fan-led meme war over Star Fox’s redesign was a reminder that the space shooter is a genre that still pulls a crowd, even on a phone screen. The seven space shooter games for Android below are the modern picks worth installing in 2026: vertical bullet hells with proper scoring, classic arcade ports, and the rare 3D dogfight that survives the touch interface.
What to look for in a space shooter on Android
Five things matter:
- Hitbox visibility. Bullet hells live or die by a clear hitbox marker on your ship. The good ones make it impossible to miss.
- Touch scheme. Drag-anywhere is the right control on a phone. Joystick-and-buttons schemes feel cramped on small screens.
- Run length. Most great mobile shooters are designed for 5-15 minute runs. Anything longer feels like a chore.
- Power-up clarity. Stage drops, weapon evolutions, and meta-progression need a clear UI. The bad apps bury upgrades in menus.
- Monetisation. The genre is full of free-to-play picks. Watch for energy timers and pay-to-win revival systems before you commit.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Free plan | Style | Format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sky Force Reloaded | The genre’s gold standard | Yes | Vertical bullet hell | Stage-based |
| Galaxy Attack: Alien Shooter | Long-running classic | Yes | Vertical | Stage-based |
| Space Shooter: Galaxy Attack | Casual entry point | Yes | Vertical | Stage-based |
| Galaga Wars+ | Apple Arcade Galaga successor | Apple Arcade only | Vertical | Stage-based |
| Subdivision Infinity DX | 3D dogfight | Paid | 3D space combat | Mission-based |
| Phoenix 2 | Boss-rush score chaser | Yes | Vertical | Score attack |
| AceForce | Fast-action vertical | Yes | Vertical | Stage-based |
The games
1. Sky Force Reloaded, the gold standard
Sky Force Reloaded is the Infinite Dreams sequel to the much-loved original. The vertical scroller loop is tuned to perfection: each stage runs about three minutes, the difficulty ladder demands real skill, and the upgrade tree rewards repeated runs without feeling like a grind. The hitbox is visible, the bullet patterns are readable, and the boss design is the best in the mobile genre.
The free tier is generous, with optional purchases for stars to accelerate the upgrade tree. The base game is one of the few mobile shooters you could put on a desktop store and not embarrass.
Where it falls short: the meta-progression is slower without star purchases. Some boss patterns are punishing on the harder difficulties.
Pricing:
- Free with optional purchases.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, consoles.
Bottom line: the right pick if you only ever install one space shooter on Android.
2. Galaxy Attack: Alien Shooter, the long-running classic
Galaxy Attack: Alien Shooter is the long-running ONESOFT classic that has been near the top of the genre charts for years. The vertical scroller covers a wide stage list with regular content updates, a deep upgrade tree, and an endless mode for score chasers. The art is clean, the boss fights are large-scale, and the overall production value is strong.
The free path is grindy without purchases, but the optional currency is cosmetic enough that it does not feel pay-to-win.
Where it falls short: ad load on the free tier is heavy. The campaign length pushes some players to a daily-grind feel.
Pricing:
- Free with ads.
- Paid: optional currency packs.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: the right pick when you want a long campaign with regular new content.
3. Space Shooter: Galaxy Attack, the casual entry point
Space Shooter: Galaxy Attack is the friendlier OneSoft variant aimed at the casual end of the genre. Stage runs are shorter, difficulty rises gently, and the upgrade tree is simpler than the Galaxy Attack flagship. Touch controls are responsive and forgiving, which suits new players to the genre.
The free path is generous, with the same optional currency model as the bigger sibling.
Where it falls short: depth is shallower than Sky Force Reloaded or Galaxy Attack: Alien Shooter. Power-up evolution is automatic.
Pricing:
- Free with ads.
- Paid: optional currency packs.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: the right pick when you want a gentle introduction to the genre.
4. Galaga Wars+, the Apple Arcade Galaga successor
Galaga Wars+ is the Bandai Namco-licensed sequel to the original arcade Galaga, released through Apple Arcade and the Google Play Pass. The format is a vertical scroller that pulls directly from Galaga’s pattern-based enemy waves, and the production value is significantly higher than the typical mobile shooter.
It is the only entry on the list with the official Galaga branding and the only one with no ads at all.
Where it falls short: requires Apple Arcade or Google Play Pass for full access. Available regions are tied to the subscription footprint.
Pricing:
- Subscription: Apple Arcade or Google Play Pass.
Platforms: Android, iOS, tvOS, macOS.
Bottom line: the right pick if you already pay for Apple Arcade or Google Play Pass.
5. Subdivision Infinity DX, the 3D dogfight
Subdivision Infinity DX is the rare 3D space combat game that survives a touchscreen. Mission-based campaign, dogfights with real depth, asteroid mining and bounty contracts, and one of the most polished console-feel productions on Android. The HUD scales well to a phone, and full gamepad support is built in.
For players who grew up on Star Fox or Wing Commander, this is the closest mobile experience.
Where it falls short: touch controls are functional rather than ideal. A Bluetooth gamepad is strongly recommended.
Pricing:
- Paid: one-off purchase.
Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, consoles.
Bottom line: the right pick when you want 3D dogfights rather than vertical scrolling.
6. Phoenix 2, the boss-rush score chaser
Phoenix 2 is the Firi Games shooter that takes the bullet hell and condenses it into 90-second runs. Each run is a single stage with a boss at the end, the score chase rules everything, and the daily mission rotation gives the meta-progression a new shape every day. Visual style is clean, with hitbox marker and slow-motion focus when the screen fills with bullets.
It is the strongest pick for a player who wants the genre tuned to short play sessions.
Where it falls short: runs are short by design, which will frustrate campaign-minded players. Stage variety is moderate.
Pricing:
- Free with optional purchases.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: the right pick when each run needs to be 90 seconds.
7. AceForce, the fast-action vertical
AceForce is the modern vertical shooter that leans into speed. Stage layouts are tight, the upgrade tree is simpler than a Sky Force, and the boss design rewards aggressive play rather than careful dodging. It is the closest the modern mobile genre gets to the arcade pacing of Raiden or DoDonPachi.
It is the right closer because it tunes the mobile shooter for arcade-feel reflexes rather than a long campaign.
Where it falls short: content runs out faster than the bigger campaigns. Ad load on the free tier is steady.
Pricing:
- Free with ads.
- Paid: optional currency packs.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: the right pick when you want arcade pacing on a phone.
How to pick the right one
If you only install one space shooter, install Sky Force Reloaded.
If you want a long campaign with regular new content, install Galaxy Attack: Alien Shooter.
If you want a gentler entry point, install Space Shooter: Galaxy Attack.
If you already pay for Apple Arcade or Google Play Pass, install Galaga Wars+.
If you want 3D dogfights, install Subdivision Infinity DX.
If each run should be 90 seconds, install Phoenix 2.
If you want arcade-style pacing, install AceForce.
FAQ
What is the best free space shooter for Android?
Sky Force Reloaded is the strongest overall free pick. Galaxy Attack: Alien Shooter is the strongest for long campaigns. Phoenix 2 is the strongest for short score-attack runs.
Is there a Star Fox-style game on Android?
The closest direct experience is Subdivision Infinity DX, which combines mission-based 3D space combat with dogfights. There is no official Star Fox release on mobile.
Do these games support a controller?
Subdivision Infinity DX has full gamepad support. Sky Force Reloaded, Galaxy Attack, and Phoenix 2 all detect gamepads but the touch drag-anywhere control is usually the better fit. AceForce works with a controller but is designed for touch.
Are these games offline?
Sky Force Reloaded, Subdivision Infinity DX, and Phoenix 2 work fully offline. Galaxy Attack and AceForce require a connection for some events and the in-game shop.
Are these games suitable for children?
Most of the picks are rated for general audiences. Subdivision Infinity DX has light combat sequences. Check each in-store rating before installing for a younger player.