Fresh Stuff Worth Clicking On
Every couple of weeks we add a new batch of apps to the catalog. Some are silly. Some are surprisingly deep. All of them run right in your browser — no installs, no account required, no convincing your IT department of anything.
Here's what just landed.
New Games
Reflex
Simple premise, genuinely humbling results. Watch an animated shape on screen and click the exact moment it changes. Reflex strips reaction timing down to its bare essentials — no distractions, just you versus your own nervous system. Spoiler: your nervous system will win for the first few rounds.
Chroma
You get five seconds to study the color tone of a photo. Then it desaturates, shifts, and you have to restore it. Chroma sounds gentle until you're on round four staring at what might be teal or might be sage and genuinely cannot tell. It's a lovely little brain workout dressed up as a chill game.
Alchemist's Atelier
Dark, slow, atmospheric. Alchemist's Atelier is an idle game set in a medieval laboratory where you gradually unlock ingredients, reactions, and lore. It's the kind of thing you open in a tab, forget about for twenty minutes, then return to find something interesting has happened. Perfect for people who like progress that doesn't demand their full attention.
Pivot
Memorize a Lissajous curve — a parametric shape drawn by two overlapping sine waves — then recreate it from memory. Pivot is weird and specific and we mean that as a compliment. It rewards the kind of spatial memory that most games don't bother testing.
New Creative Tools
Classic Paint by Numbers
Exactly what it sounds like, and exactly as satisfying as you remember. Classic Paint by Numbers comes with multiple difficulty settings, so it works whether you want a quick ten-minute wind-down or a proper sit-down project. The browser version means no app download and no cleanup. Highly recommended for anyone who needs something to do with their hands while half-watching television.
New Education
Signal
Learn Morse code by actually doing it — tap for dots, hold for dashes, listen as you go. Signal has three difficulty levels and teaches through ear and muscle memory rather than charts and flashcards. Is Morse code a practical skill in 2025? Probably not. Is it oddly satisfying to learn? Absolutely yes.
Where to Find More
These are just the highlights from the latest additions. We're adding new apps every fortnight across games, creative tools, music, productivity, and more. Browse the full Launch Arcade catalog to see everything — there's always something in there you haven't tried yet.



