Best Mobile Games to Play on PC in 2026 (15 That Run Great)
Discover the best mobile games to play on PC in 2026 — from action RPGs to battle royales — and how to run them smoothly with keyboard and mouse.

Playing mobile games on PC is no longer a compromise — it is an upgrade. A larger screen, a mechanical keyboard, a precise mouse, and the full processing power of a desktop GPU change how these games feel entirely. Whether you are grinding ranked matches in a battle royale or collecting characters in a gacha RPG, the experience on PC is objectively smoother and more comfortable for long sessions.
This guide covers 15 mobile games that genuinely shine when played on a PC through an Android emulator. They are grouped by genre so you can jump straight to what interests you, and each entry notes what kind of hardware the game demands. At the end you will find a quick walkthrough on getting any of them running in minutes.
Action RPGs — Epic Scale, Better Controls
Genshin Impact
Genshin Impact is arguably the game that put free-to-play action RPGs on the map globally, and it remains one of the strongest arguments for playing mobile games on a big screen. The open world of Teyvat is visually dense, with weather systems, detailed environments, and a rotating cast of playable characters each with unique animations.
On PC through an emulator you get two major advantages over the phone version: your character movement and camera control become dramatically more precise with a mouse, and the larger display lets you appreciate environmental detail that is genuinely lost on a 6-inch screen. The game is GPU-intensive at higher settings, so if your machine has a dedicated graphics card, set the rendering quality to "Highest" and enjoy it the way it was designed to look.
Zenless Zone Zero
HoYoverse's newest flagship title takes the studio's combat design and places it inside a stylish urban setting. The game leans harder on combo chaining and dodge-timing than Genshin, which makes accurate mouse-click inputs feel like a genuine competitive edge over touchscreen tapping. Frame rate consistency matters here — the combat is fast — so an emulator that maintains smooth performance pays off immediately.
Honkai: Star Rail
If real-time action is not your preference, Honkai: Star Rail offers the same production quality as other HoYoverse titles but in a turn-based format. The game runs comfortably on mid-range hardware, making it one of the more accessible choices on this list. Reading story dialogue and managing your team roster is simply more pleasant on a monitor than squinting at a phone display.
Battle Royale — Where PC Controls Make the Biggest Difference
The competitive advantage of keyboard and mouse over touchscreen controls is nowhere more pronounced than in battle royale games. Aiming, building, looting — all of it becomes faster and more reliable. If you are serious about ranked play in any of the following titles, running them on PC is the logical choice. You can read more about setting up precise inputs in our keyboard and mouse controls guide.
PUBG Mobile
PUBG Mobile has maintained a dedicated competitive scene for years, and the PC version of the game still references it as a design baseline. The mobile version gives you a full 100-player battle royale with vehicles, realistic ballistics, and large maps. On an emulator you can bind every action — looting, crouching, lean-peeking, scope switching — to individual keys, and aiming with a mouse is as close to PC PUBG as you can get without buying the standalone game.
Call of Duty Mobile
Call of Duty Mobile packs a surprising number of modes: traditional multiplayer with iconic maps, a separate battle royale map, and seasonal events that keep the content rotating. The time-to-kill is faster than PUBG, which makes accurate first-shot placement even more critical — another reason a mouse wins over a touchscreen. The game runs well on modest hardware and maintains stable frame rates in most conditions.
Free Fire
Free Fire is the battle royale designed specifically for lower-end hardware, and it shows: matches are quick (around 10 minutes), the map is compact, and the graphics are intentionally lightweight. If you are on an older PC or want a fast-paced alternative to the heavier titles above, Free Fire is a reliable option. Check our guide for low-end PC emulation if your machine is on the modest side.
Strategy and Card Games — Better on a Big Screen
Clash of Clans
Supercell's base-building classic has been running for over a decade and shows no signs of slowing down. The active management of a Clash of Clans village — upgrading buildings, organizing troops, participating in Clan Wars — benefits enormously from the precision of a mouse cursor. Clicking the exact building you want without accidentally misselecting a neighbor is a small quality-of-life improvement that adds up over hundreds of sessions.
Clash Royale
Real-time card battles at Clash Royale's pace demand accurate card placement, and a mouse gives you a measurable edge over fat-fingering a touchscreen. Being able to drop a building precisely on the tile you intended, or split-lane push with two simultaneous card placements, is just easier with a cursor. The game is also very light on hardware requirements.
Marvel Snap
Marvel Snap is one of the most cleverly designed card games released in years. Each match takes around three minutes, locations change the rules every game, and deck-building theory is surprisingly deep for a game that looks casual. On a large monitor the card art — which Marvel licenses from actual comic book illustrators — is far more impressive than on a small phone screen.
Multiplayer and Party Games
Mobile Legends: Bang Bang
Mobile Legends is the dominant MOBA in Southeast Asia and Latin America, with a competitive ranked ladder that takes the game seriously. A MOBA on touchscreen has always been a control compromise. On PC you get mouse-aimed skill shots, hotkeyed items, and the spatial awareness that comes from seeing the minimap more clearly. If you have ever watched your skills miss because your thumb slightly missed the direction, you will immediately notice the difference.
Brawl Stars
Brawl Stars offers several short-format modes — 3v3 team brawls, solo battle royale, heist, and more — each with a roster of characters with distinct abilities. The twin-stick shooter mechanics translate naturally to keyboard movement plus mouse aiming. Matches are short enough that it is easy to squeeze in a few rounds without committing to a long session.
Stumble Guys
Stumble Guys is a chaotic party elimination game in the style of Fall Guys, and it is genuinely more fun in a group setting on a big monitor. The physics-based obstacle courses do not demand precision inputs, so it is one of the more relaxing entries on this list — good for unwinding rather than competing.
Among Us
Among Us is still going strong and benefits from PC controls primarily during the discussion phase: typing accusations and reading chat is dramatically faster on a physical keyboard. The game is light enough to run on practically any hardware.
Racing and Casual
Asphalt 9: Legends
Asphalt 9 is a visually impressive arcade racer with licensed cars and a progression system that gives long-term players plenty to chase. At high graphical settings it pushes the GPU harder than most titles on this list, so it is worth checking our FPS optimization guide if you experience stuttering on the busier tracks. With a GPU that can handle it, the game looks genuinely spectacular on a 1080p or 1440p monitor.
Subway Surfers
Subway Surfers is one of the most downloaded mobile games of all time and needs almost no introduction. Swipe-based endless runners feel a little different mapped to keyboard keys, but the game adapts well and remains a satisfying time-killer. It is also among the lightest games on this list — it will run on virtually any hardware.
How to Run Any of These on PC with NovaPlay
Getting these games running takes about five minutes with the right emulator. Here is the general process:
- Download and install NovaPlay — grab it here. The installer handles the necessary system components automatically.
- Open the built-in app store inside NovaPlay and search for the game you want. All 15 titles above are available through standard app distribution.
- Configure your controls — NovaPlay includes a keymapping layer that lets you assign keyboard keys and mouse actions to virtual touch inputs. For battle royale games especially, take five minutes to set this up before your first match.
- Adjust performance settings — set the CPU and RAM allocation based on how demanding the game is. GPU-heavy titles like Genshin Impact and Asphalt 9 benefit from higher graphics settings if your hardware supports it.
- Log in with your existing account — all of the games above support account sign-in, so your progress, purchases, and friends list carry over from mobile.
One practical note: games that use anti-cheat systems (PUBG Mobile and Call of Duty Mobile, specifically) require an emulator that passes their integrity checks. NovaPlay is configured to work correctly with both.
Final Thoughts
The best mobile games to play on PC are the ones where the control upgrade or the screen size genuinely changes the experience — and most of the games on this list meet that bar. Action RPGs become more cinematic, battle royales become more competitive, strategy games become less fiddly, and even casual games are simply more comfortable for extended play.
You do not need a high-end rig for most of them. A mid-range machine handles 80 percent of this list at smooth frame rates without any special configuration. For the more demanding titles, a small amount of tuning goes a long way.
If you have not tried gaming this way yet, pick one title from above that you already play on your phone and run it on PC for a session. The difference is immediate. Download NovaPlay and give it a try.
NovaPlay is an independent Android emulator and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or associated with any third-party game or brand mentioned. Game names are used for descriptive purposes only.