Subatomic Free app for iPhone and iPad


4.7 ( 6737 ratings )
Games Entertainment Action Arcade
Developer: 7b5 Labs
Free
Current version: 2.2.1, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 30 Nov 2009
App size: 19.49 Mb

Picked as TUAWs first-ever App of the Day!
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Save the world. One particle at a time.

Welcome to the world of Subatomic. The moves are simple: touch near the particles to push them away from your finger -- the closer you touch, the harder youll push. The goal is even simpler: separate the red particles from the blue, guiding each into its matching Reactor Core. Generate matter/antimatter rocket fuel to help launch humanitys survivors to safety, while earning points to move you to the next level. To avoid a meltdown, just make sure the Cores dont run dry.

Sound easy? Sure it is. Until the radioactive particles start decaying. And the particles start to annihilate when you make a mistake. Before long youre dealing with particles pairing up, or rogue Reactor Cores drifting around the arena, or shifting gravitational gradients, or a menagerie of other unexpected hazards. Thats when things start to get interesting. Just keep that zen-like cool and youll be fine. The fate of humanity depends on it.

Subatomic is an addictively simple game of tactics and reflexes in a surreal microscopic world. Spend ten seconds or ten minutes at a time honing your skills in this physics-based realm where harmony and chaos are separated by a touch of your finger.

- 7 levels INCLUDED FOR FREE
- $0.99 IN-GAME UPGRADE for access to 24 ADDITIONAL LEVELS across 8 unique new zones featuring a variety of new twists and hazards (for a total of 31 unique levels). Plus additional music, game arena backgrounds, and multi-touch control!
- Features Game Center achievements and leaderboards
- Retina display support
- Brain-twisting Reality Modes for devices with cameras
- Original soundtrack by Bence Tasnadi
- Play on your iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch
- Exit the game at any time and come back a few seconds or a few days later, exactly where you left off
- Play against a background of Scanning Electron Microscope imagery courtesy of Jan Gräser, as well as the Alaska Volcano Observatory; the Unites States Geological Survey; and Dartmouth College