Fruit Ninja®

Fruit Ninja®

Halfbrick Studios

Rating 4.4 (5,359,269 reviews)

A touch-based fruit-slicing arcade game built around reflexes, combos, and short sessions

The appeal comes from a small set of mechanics that are easy to understand but ask for precise timing. Most of the game is about reacting quickly, building score multipliers, and deciding when to play safely versus aggressively.

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Category Arcade
Installs 500,000,000+
Version 3.96.7
Updated Jul 2, 2026
Fruit Ninja® screenshot 1Fruit Ninja® screenshot 2Fruit Ninja® screenshot 3Fruit Ninja® screenshot 4Fruit Ninja® screenshot 5Fruit Ninja® screenshot 6Fruit Ninja® screenshot 7Fruit Ninja® screenshot 8

About this game

Game Overview

Fruit Ninja is a touch-driven arcade game from Halfbrick Studios built around one simple loop: slice fruit as it flies across the screen while avoiding bombs. That premise sounds minimal, but the game layers in score chasing, combo timing, and mode-specific rules that keep each round moving quickly. The result is a mobile game designed for short bursts, not long campaigns. Its visual style is bright and cartoonish, with exaggerated fruit splashes and readable motion that suits phones and tablets well. The store description points to three core modes, plus events, daily challenges, local multiplayer, and leaderboard competition, so the experience mixes quick solo play with light social rivalry. With over 500 million installs and more than 5.3 million ratings on Google Play, it remains one of the most established touch arcade titles on Android and iOS in Canada.

Core Gameplay Features

  • Arcade Mode This mode centres on high-score chasing, with bombs to avoid and special bananas that alter scoring or pace. It is the most competitive part of the loop and rewards accuracy under pressure.
  • Zen Mode Zen Mode strips away the bomb pressure and turns the game into a calmer slicing session. It suits shorter, low-stress play and shows how the core mechanic works without the score race.
  • Classic Mode Classic mode is the endless baseline, asking players to keep fruit in play while avoiding bombs and missed slices. It is the clearest version of the game’s reflex-first design.
  • Event Challenges Event mode adds structured clashes against named characters and offers unique swords and dojos as rewards. That gives the game a progression layer beyond pure score chasing.
  • Local Multiplayer The shared-screen local multiplayer option and leaderboard comparison add a social layer without changing the core controls. It gives the game a reason to return after solo scores plateau.

What Makes It Stand Out

Few mobile arcade games have stayed this recognisable for this long. Fruit Ninja’s strength is not complexity, but clarity: the rules are immediate, the feedback is instant, and the modes give the same touch mechanic several different rhythms.

  • Huge Install Base The Google Play listing shows 500,000,000+ installs, which signals a long-running audience and a familiar design language. That scale also suggests the game has been refined for broad mobile appeal.
  • Strong Rating Volume More than 5.3 million Google Play ratings give the 4.38 score useful context. It is not a niche curiosity; it has enough feedback to suggest consistent reception over time.
  • Wide Platform Support It is available on both the Canada Google Play Store and the Canadian App Store, with current versions on each. That makes it easy to install on either Android phones or iPhones and iPads.

Things to Know Before Playing

This is a free mobile game, so the practical tradeoff is monetisation and storage rather than purchase price. The content rating is very young-audience friendly, and the current App Store build is a mid-sized download for a casual arcade title.

  • Free-To-Play Monetisation The game is free on both official stores, which usually means optional in-app purchases or other monetisation is part of the package. The listing does not spell out the full economy, so the store page is the safest reference.
  • App Store Size The iOS version is listed at about 431.7 MB, so it is worth leaving extra free space for updates and cache. A little headroom helps avoid failed installs and patch problems.
  • Family-Friendly Rating Google Play rates it Everyone and the App Store lists 4+, so it is positioned as suitable for younger players. Parents still may want to manage screen time because score chasing can be repetitive.

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