Video games are a great way to kill time, especially the ones that have a lot of content to mess around with. There are a lot of games which you can just, you know, play forever. These could be your open-world games or some sort of endless runner titles. If you absolutely hate spending a lot of money on games, then we suggest you play such games.
Note: The games are not limited to one particular platform. We have something for everyone, so be sure to check out the supported platform for each game.
#1 Alto's Odyssey
If you want to play a really good game on your mobile phones to kill time, then Alto's Odyssey is the way to go. It's one of those endless games where you chase llamas, perform backflips, and just have fun in general. It's also one of the most beautiful games to play, so you won't really be exhausted looking at it either.
It's got 50 levels with a ton of achievements to finish. Regardless of whether you somehow manage to finish all of them, you can simply reset it and start over again. That being said you won't be exhausted with it. It's that good.
#2 Apex Legends
Well, all the online games including the battle royale titles like Apex Legends, Fortnite, Call Of Duty Warzone, etc. are all technically endless because no games are similar. You drop in and gather different loot each time, in the first place, and face different opponents as well. You can always choose to quit after winning a game, yet it usually improves over the long run. I have over 500 hours on Apex Legends, and I actually have a ton of crushing to improve.
#3 Pac-Man 256
Pac-Man is a timeless classic that's here to stay. This is one of the first and arguably the best endless games of all time. The Pac-Man 256 is based on the original game's infamous 256th level, which glitches out and becomes unplayable. It resembles any other Pac-Man game, however here, you can arm the Pac-Man with tools like laser, tornado, fire, and more.
#4 Animal Crossing: New Horizons
You've probably heard of this game by now. Animal Crossing: New Horizons is the new fad among Nintendo Switch gamers. It brings components from games like Stardew Valley, The Sims, and a couple of others to give you an ideal time-killing machine. You can do things like form, gather, make companions, welcome companions to your home, and for the most part goof around the island. It's wonderful.
#5 Grand Theft Auto (GTA)
One of the most popular game in the world. Indeed, technically, Grand Theft Auto games do have a story that comes to an end. However, does it mean it's unplayable after that? Absolutely not. In fact, I'd say the game is more enjoyable when you're not playing in the story and simply playing in the open-world. I actually have San Andreas installed on my laptop and I visit it regularly to kill some time. :)
#6 Left 4 Dead
Come the zombie apocalypse you can be sure of one thing: you're unlikely to run out of zombies to kill, since everyone who gets killed by a zombie will swiftly join their ranks. Which makes it the ideal subject for an endless computer game, as is borne out by Left 4 Dead. Its main campaign, obviously, has an exceptionally positive closure, yet its Survival mode – added as DLC in 2009 – gives you the legitimate zombie apocalypse experience: just you and your companions against a limitless stockpile of the tainted. Stay chilly.
#7 Call of Duty: Modern Warfare
Multiplayer gaming's been around ever since Pong, yet it just truly grew up once we as a whole got fast web connections and could play against – or collaborate with – others from around the globe, and the likes of Present day Fighting are what assisted with making it so universally well known. Current Warfare's single player campaign's incredible, yet we as a whole know it's about the multiplayer mode, and specifically Prestige Mode: maximizing your experience level and restarting at level one however with a special symbol so that everyone knows you're not to be messed with.
#8 Minecraft
There's no need to explain what Minecraft is or why it's so popular, we as a whole are so familiar with its ways at this point. What you probably won't understand, however, is just how enormous it is. Assuming that you've at any point set out on the PC version to attempt to find the edge of the world, you're in for a long excursion: every world – created algorithmically from a random seed number – is 30,000 blocks in both length and width, which translates into something like eight times the surface area of Earth, or roughly the same as the planet Neptune. So you're unlikely to at any point get to see it all, even before you start digging underneath the surface.
#9 Flappy Bird
We're heartbroken. Everything about Flappy Bird is terrible – its illustrations, its ham-fisted execution, its idiotic difficulty level and so on – but then something doesn't add up about its actual horribleness, maybe joined with its open-endedness, that makes it especially interesting to a specific cross-part of gamers. Maybe they consider it to be a particularly bad-to-the-bone test, or possibly they're simply masochists; why should we pass judgment? Play the game & kill the time.
#10 No Man's Sky
Hi Games' No Man's Sky promised – and delivered – an entire galaxy, but despite that the finished product left a lot of gamers feeling disappointed. And it's not hard to see the reason why: with 18 quintillion procedurally-generated planets, things are bound to get a bit repetitive after a while, and that's exactly how things turned out. No Man's Sky couldn't match individuals' stellar expectations, and fans turned on it in their droves. The game's Foundation update further developed matters with the ability to create bases and purchase interstellar freighters, as well as adding an open creative mode and really challenging survival mode, but still didn't exactly convey enough things to accomplish for more action-focused gamers. Still, in case you're in the state of mind to simply relax and partake in the endless scenery, No Man's Sky is hard to beat.
* KEEP PLAYING *
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ReplyDeleteThanks
DeleteIn future you can add the name of google chrome's Dino's game.. A game that never ends..
ReplyDeletemay be it will publish as part 2
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