Game Releases

GamingonPhone tracks active mobile game releases, flags titles stuck in limbo

GamingonPhone’s living release board trims mobile noise, spotlighting games that are still moving and the projects slipping into limbo.

Nina Kowalski··4 min read
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GamingonPhone tracks active mobile game releases, flags titles stuck in limbo
Source: gamingonphone.com

When the mobile calendar turns into a wall of logos and vague launch windows, GamingonPhone’s upcoming-games board works like a filter instead of a hype reel. Updated on June 2, 2026, it separates projects with visible momentum from the ones that look stuck, which matters in a month where GamingonPhone’s own June release roundup says there are “above 40 titles” and the count could still climb.

A living tracker, not a hype dump

That approach is the whole point of the page. Rather than treating every announcement as if it were equally close to your phone, the list is built around active development progress, so the reader can tell what still deserves attention and what is drifting into uncertainty. For anyone trying to keep up with mobile without getting buried, that is a much sharper tool than a generic upcoming-release list.

The scope is broad on purpose. GamingonPhone’s board moves across major cross-platform RPGs, live-service action games, football titles, creature collectors, and smaller projects that could still become surprise hits, while its homepage keeps the site’s June 2026 news cadence visible through constant updates. In a category where launch dates move fast and enthusiasm can outrun reality, that steady maintenance is the real feature.

The games still worth tracking

The clearest reason to keep this page bookmarked is the mix of recognizable IP and genuinely ambitious new projects. Some names already carry the kind of weight that changes how players budget time, storage, and pre-registration attention, while others are interesting because they could push mobile into new shapes rather than repeating familiar formulas.

    Among the titles GamingonPhone currently places in active development are:

  • Honor of Kings: World, Overwatch Rush, Varsapura, Project R.I.S.E, Valorant Mobile, Monster Hunter Outlanders, Honkai: Nexus Anima, CookieRun: New World, and Ananta.
  • Totopia, Strinova Mobile, Rust Mobile, RF Online Next, Project RX, Petit Planet, Digimon UP!, UFL Mobile, and GOALS.
  • Palworld Mobile, Aniimo, Sea of Remnants, My Hero Academia: UNITED SURVIVAL, Plants vs Zombies 3: Evolved, Horizon Steel Frontiers, LIMIT ZERO BREAKERS, and Project Spirits.
  • Boat Game, DAVE THE DIVER Mobile, Project Terrarium, Disney Sparklink Stars, and a new Angry Birds project.

That spread says a lot about where mobile is heading. Big-brand adaptations are still the loudest signal, but the list also makes room for games that could matter because of their systems, not just their logos, especially in lanes like creature collecting, live-service action, and mobile-first experiments that try to do more than shrink a console idea onto a smaller screen.

Why the limbo section matters

The separate limbo section is what keeps the page from becoming another announcement graveyard. It tells you where the conversation is still active and where it has started to stall, which is crucial in a market where a trailer can generate months of chatter even if the project itself is not moving with any real pace.

That distinction is more useful than routine buying advice or static expectation-setting. If a title still has clear momentum, it stays on the radar as a real near-term possibility. If it has slipped into limbo, readers can stop treating it like a release that is around the corner and start filing it where it belongs, as a maybe rather than a plan.

The bigger signal across mobile ecosystems

The page also lands in a wider industry context that makes its filtering even more relevant. Tencent’s investor materials still describe Honor of Kings and VALORANT as evergreen games in its portfolio, which is a reminder that some franchises remain powerful long before every platform plan is fully public. At the same time, Riot Mobile supports VALORANT-related services and esports viewing, but Riot’s public-facing mobile news does not show a confirmed Valorant Mobile release date.

Capcom offers another useful signal. Monster Hunter Puzzles: Felyne Isles shows the company continuing to push mobile Monster Hunter releases onto iOS and Android, proving that established IP can keep finding new shapes on phones even when the exact rollout path is different from what fans expect. Put together, those examples explain why a board like GamingonPhone’s matters: it helps separate enduring franchise energy from actual launch momentum.

The real value here is not just knowing what exists, but knowing what is still moving. When June alone can hold “above 40 titles” and still grow, a good mobile-release guide is less about keeping up with everything and more about spotting which games are actually heading somewhere.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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