Indiana Jones and the Great Circle is finally landing on Switch 2, which means yet another generation of players is about to discover that ancient-ruins-and-ropework adventure is still one of the most satisfying gaming genres going. Action adventure on Android has improved dramatically in the last few years, with console-grade ports running comfortably on mid-range phones and original mobile-native games doing the genre justice. We tested seven action adventure games for Android, looking at exploration depth, combat feel, narrative weight, and how cleanly the controls translate to a touchscreen.
What to look for in an action adventure game for Android
Action adventure on phones has to thread three needles at once. Touch controls have to feel responsive, the world has to be big enough to explore but not so big that every bus ride only fits a single fast-travel hop, and the narrative has to land without a 40-hour campaign expectation.
The factors we weighed:
- Touch control precision. Camera control plus movement plus combat actions have to coexist on a small screen. The best games offer optional gamepad support.
- World scale. Truly open worlds versus chapter-based exploration. Both work; pick the one that fits how you actually play.
- Combat depth. Some games sit closer to action, others closer to puzzle-platformer. The genre is broad on purpose.
- Storytelling. Narrative-driven adventure games like Brothers and Oddmar prove a phone game can hit emotional beats console games sometimes miss.
- Premium versus live service. Premium one-time purchases give complete experiences with no live-service hooks. Live-service games offer ongoing updates but trade them for ad and battle pass rhythms.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Style | Free plan | Starting price | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sky: Children of the Light | Best overall multiplayer adventure | Co-op explore | Yes | $4.99 packs | 4.5 (Play Store) |
| Genshin Impact | Open-world action RPG | Open-world | Yes | $4.99 packs | 4.4 (Play Store) |
| Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas | Best classic console port | Open-world | No | $6.99 (paid) | 4.5 (Play Store) |
| Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons | Best story-driven adventure | Story | No | $4.99 (paid) | 4.6 (Play Store) |
| Oddmar | Best mobile-native platformer | Platformer | Yes (5 levels) | $4.99 unlock | 4.8 (Play Store) |
| Oceanhorn 2 | Best Zelda-like adventure | Adventure RPG | No | $4.99 (paid) | 4.5 (Play Store) |
| Shadowgun Legends | Best shooter adventure | FPS adventure | Yes | $4.99 packs | 4.4 (Play Store) |
The 7 best action adventure games for Android
1. Sky: Children of the Light, best overall multiplayer adventure
Sky: Children of the Light from thatgamecompany (the studio behind Journey) is the best action adventure game on Android right now. You play a robe-wearing child of the light gliding across vast cloud realms, holding hands with strangers to share lights and unlock new paths. The world updates every few weeks with new seasonal events, candle currencies, and cosmetic items. Co-op happens organically: players you meet in realms become anonymous companions, then friends.
Where it falls short: Live-service candle currency grind ramps up if you want every cosmetic item. Touch controls have a learning curve before flight feels intuitive.
Pricing:
- Free: full game and most content
- Paid: candle and seasonal pass packs from $4.99 for cosmetic items
Style: Co-op exploration with light combat
Bottom line: Pick Sky if you want a meditative, beautiful, multiplayer-flavoured adventure that rewards return visits.
2. Genshin Impact, best open-world action RPG
Genshin Impact is the largest open-world action RPG you can run on a phone. The Teyvat continent now spans seven major regions with their own quest lines, character rosters, and cuisines. Combat uses element-swapping party tactics across a five-character team. New regions release on a regular cadence, and the cross-progression with PC and PlayStation keeps you in the same save across devices.
Where it falls short: Heavy on storage (about 30+ GB after all updates). Wish-banner gacha for character acquisition is the live-service hook that defines the genre.
Pricing:
- Free: full game, all regions, gacha-based characters
- Paid: Genesis Crystals from $4.99 for premium currency and Welkin Moon monthly pass
Style: Open-world action RPG
Bottom line: Pick Genshin Impact if you want the largest free open-world adventure on Android with cross-platform play.
3. Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, best classic console port
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is the gold standard of classic console-to-mobile ports. The full 2004 game runs at improved resolution with reworked draw distances, on-screen control schemes, and gamepad support. The story still holds up, the soundtrack still rules, and the side activities cover everything from gang takeovers to stunts to dating mechanics.
Where it falls short: Touch controls take time to feel natural for driving and shooting. No multiplayer.
Pricing:
- Paid: $6.99 one-time, often discounted to $1.99
- Free: none
Style: Open-world crime adventure
Bottom line: Pick GTA: San Andreas if you missed the original or want to revisit it on a phone with bigger draw distances and clean controls.
4. Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons, best story-driven adventure
Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons is a four-hour narrative adventure where you control two brothers simultaneously, each with their own thumbstick. The unique input scheme drives both gameplay and the emotional payoff. Rebuilt for mobile with redesigned touch controls, the story lands every bit as hard as the original Xbox 360 release.
Where it falls short: Short. One sitting and you are done. No replay value beyond the second-playthrough emotional reread.
Pricing:
- Paid: $4.99 one-time
- Free: none
Style: Narrative puzzle adventure
Bottom line: Pick Brothers if you want one of the best small games on Android and you have an evening to set aside.
5. Oddmar, best mobile-native platformer
Oddmar is a Norse-inspired action platformer made specifically for touch screens. The art is hand-painted, the controls are deliberate, and every level introduces a new mechanic before it gets old. The free trial covers five levels; the full unlock opens 24 chapters across mountains, mines, and Asgard-tier dreamscapes.
Where it falls short: Short, fixed campaign with no live-service hooks. Some readers may want more after finishing.
Pricing:
- Free: 5 introductory levels
- Paid: $4.99 unlock for the full game
Style: Action platformer
Bottom line: Pick Oddmar if you want a beautiful mobile-native platformer with deliberate pacing and no microtransactions.
6. Oceanhorn 2, best Zelda-like adventure
Oceanhorn 2: Knights of the Lost Realm is the closest thing to a Zelda game you can play on Android. Sword combat, shield blocks, magical spell casting, dungeon puzzles, and an overworld split between airships and overland exploration. The game runs through a 15-hour main campaign plus side quests, and the visual quality holds up against early Switch first-party output.
Where it falls short: Storage footprint is big (around 4 GB). Touch controls take adjustment for combat-heavy boss fights.
Pricing:
- Paid: $4.99 one-time
- Free: none
Style: Action RPG adventure
Bottom line: Pick Oceanhorn 2 if you want a polished Zelda-style adventure on Android with sword and magic combat.
7. Shadowgun Legends, best shooter adventure
Shadowgun Legends is a story-driven first-person shooter with action-adventure structure. Solo and co-op campaign missions, raids, and PvP arenas across a sci-fi setting. Madfinger Games has been refining mobile FPS combat for over a decade, and the result is one of the smoothest shooter-adventure hybrids on Android.
Where it falls short: Live-service grind for top-tier weapons. Some endgame content gates behind premium tier.
Pricing:
- Free: full campaign and PvE content
- Paid: gold and SP packs from $4.99 for cosmetic and weapon upgrades
Style: First-person shooter adventure
Bottom line: Pick Shadowgun Legends if you want shooter combat inside an action adventure structure.
How to pick the right action adventure game for Android
Pick Sky: Children of the Light if you want a multiplayer-flavoured atmospheric adventure that you can dip into for short sessions.
Pick Genshin Impact if you want the largest open-world adventure on Android and you have a flagship-class phone with plenty of storage.
Pick GTA: San Andreas if you grew up on the PlayStation 2 era and you want a complete classic running on your phone.
Pick Brothers if you want a short, narrative-driven adventure that delivers an emotional payoff most short games miss.
Pick Oddmar if you want a beautiful mobile-native platformer with no live-service hooks.
Pick Oceanhorn 2 if you want a Zelda-style sword-and-magic action adventure with a complete campaign.
Pick Shadowgun Legends if you want shooter combat inside the action adventure framework.
FAQ
What is the best action adventure game for Android? Sky: Children of the Light for the broadest free pick, Oceanhorn 2 for a Zelda-style premium adventure, GTA: San Andreas for the classic open-world experience.
Are there console-quality action adventure games on Android? Yes. GTA: San Andreas, Oceanhorn 2, and Shadowgun Legends all hit close to console quality on a recent Android phone. Genshin Impact is a cross-platform release with the same content as PC and PlayStation.
Can I play these games with a controller on Android? Most of them, yes. GTA: San Andreas, Oceanhorn 2, Genshin Impact, and Shadowgun Legends all support gamepad input via Bluetooth controllers. Sky: Children of the Light is touch-only by design.
What is the best free action adventure game for Android? Sky: Children of the Light is the strongest free pick. Genshin Impact is also free with optional gacha. Oddmar offers a free trial of five levels before paid unlock.
Do I need a flagship phone to run these? Genshin Impact and Oceanhorn 2 benefit from flagship-class hardware for best framerate and graphics. Sky: Children of the Light, Brothers, Oddmar, and GTA: San Andreas run smoothly on mid-range phones from the past few years.