Android arcade-style space game built with 100% AI-generated code.
Crashy Zorg is an Android arcade-style space game in the classic mold — quick reflex gameplay, retro spacecraft visuals, short sessions, and a "one more run" loop. You pilot a small ship through obstacles, dodge hazards, and try to push your run further than the last one. It's the kind of pick-up-and-play title that thrives on Play Store browsers looking for something light to fill a few minutes.
How it was built
The notable thing about Crashy Zorg is the build process: the developer, who publishes under the handle blobware, describes the game as "100% AI-coded, no manually written code." Every line of the game's source — game loop, physics, rendering, UI, store metadata flow — came out of an AI coding tool, with the human in the role of director rather than typist.
The specific stack of tools blobware used isn't publicly documented, which is itself part of the story. As of 2025 a growing cohort of indie Android developers are shipping games this way and treating the AI tooling as a commodity layer; the interesting artifact is the finished APK on the Play Store, not the brand of assistant that wrote it.
Crashy Zorg is featured in the community-maintained awesome-vibecoded-apps list on GitHub as one of the canonical examples of a fully AI-coded shipped Android title.
Why it matters
Crashy Zorg is a useful counterweight to the iOS-heavy narrative around vibe-coded apps. Most of the press coverage in 2025 focused on Swift and the App Store, but Android has been quietly getting the same treatment — solo developers using AI tools to produce small games and utilities, ship them to the Play Store, and iterate based on real installs. Crashy Zorg sits squarely in that pattern.
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