Habby launches Dicero worldwide as Control arrives on iPhone and iPad
Control is the cleaner download at $4.99 with touch controls and all released content; Dicero is Habby's next roguelite swing for Archero fans.

Control is the install-now pick. Remedy Entertainment brought Control Ultimate Edition to iPhone and iPad on April 22 for $4.99, and that price buys the full package, all released content included. It is also the most convincing demonstration in this slate that a console-scale game can survive the jump to a phone without feeling stripped to the bone. Touch controls are in, the gameplay and UI were reworked for mobile, and ray tracing is supported on compatible hardware.
Dicero is the more obvious try-now if you already trust Habby’s loop. The game soft-launched on Android and iOS in select regions, including India and the Philippines, before its worldwide rollout, and Habby pitched it as a dice-based casual roguelite with hundreds of unique skills and gear, plus pixel visuals and simple mechanics. That combination sounds built for short sessions and repeat runs, the exact kind of design that tends to stick when a mobile game needs to earn a permanent spot on a crowded home screen.
The bigger reason Dicero matters is Habby’s track record. The Singapore-founded publisher started in January 2018 and has stacked up hit after hit, from Archero and Survivor!.io to Archero 2 and Wittle Defender. Habby’s own timeline places Archero 2 in January 2025 and Wittle Defender in June 2025, which makes Dicero look less like a one-off experiment and more like the next move in a very active release machine. Industry estimates have already put Habby past $2 billion in user spending, with Survivor!.io and Archero making up a major share of that total. That is the kind of number that gets attention because it signals a studio that knows exactly how to hook mobile players who want fast progression and a clean loop.
If you only have room for one download, Control wins on value and certainty. It has a known name, a low price, and a clear mobile conversion that does not feel like a compromise. Dicero is the more likely time sink if you want another Habby grinder in the Archero mold, but it is still competing for attention against a busy launch slate that also includes a Monopoly-branded match-3 puzzler, Honor of Kings World in China, and a stack of indie releases. The week’s message is simple: one premium port is ready now, and one fresh roguelite is ready to see whether Habby can keep the streak going.
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