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Star Blaster lands on iOS and Android with offline roguelike action

Star Blaster is a free, offline roguelike shooter on iOS and Android, built for quick runs, boss fights, and spare-minute play.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Star Blaster lands on iOS and Android with offline roguelike action
Source: media.pocketgamer.com

Star Blaster has landed on iOS and Android with a clear pitch for mobile players who want action without a time sink: short, fast runs that work even when the connection drops. The free-to-download roguelike shooter drops you into the role of a lone astronaut cutting through waves of machines across a sci-fi galaxy, with each attempt built around picking up skills, stacking upgrades, and pushing a little farther before the run ends.

That pace is the game’s main selling point. Instead of stretching a session into a long grind, Star Blaster keeps the action moving so choices still matter while you are on the bus, between stops, or killing ten minutes before something else starts. Boss encounters break up the enemy waves, giving each run a sharper rhythm than a straight corridor shooter and helping the game avoid the same-repetition feeling that can sink lesser roguelikes on mobile.

The launch details suggest a rollout that took shape over several months. The Apple App Store listing marked Star Blaster: Shooting Game as expected on May 15, 2026, while Google Play and AppBrain showed an Android release date of November 26, 2025, with an update on May 27, 2026. On Google Play, the game is listed as Star Blaster Offline Roguelike and carries a 3.4-star rating, while AppBrain puts the Android version at 100,000-plus downloads, a sign that the title has already found some traction.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Enigma Publishing Limited is the name attached to the release on both major storefronts, and the studio has a longer mobile résumé that includes Avalar: Raid of Shadow, Avalar: Shadow War, and Undead Slayer. Enigma Softwares also describes Star Blaster as an offline roguelike set in a sci-fi space universe, and its support page lists a Hanoi address at VNT Building, 19 Nguyen Trai Street, Khuong Dinh Ward, in Vietnam.

Star Blaster is not trying to rewrite the roguelike shooter playbook. It is trying to make that loop lighter, quicker, and easier to pick up, which is exactly the kind of design that can make sense on a phone. For players who want a compact run, a few upgrade decisions, and the option to play without data, that may be enough to make the commute feel shorter.

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