Wobbling

Wobbling

By Robert Corbin

  • Category: Games
  • Release Date: 2026-05-26
  • Current Version: 1.0
  • Adult Rating: 4+
  • File Size: 2.74 MB
  • Developer: Robert Corbin
  • Compatibility: Requires iOS 17.0 or later.

Description

A plate-spinning carnival arcade, hand-drawn in the style of a 1920s circus poster. Plates spin on top of bamboo poles. Each plate slows over time -- if its spin runs out, the plate falls. Tap a plate to restore its spin to full. Keep them all going. Three crashes ends the act; surviving ninety seconds wins it. No in-app purchases, no subscriptions, no expansion packs, no advertisements. FEATURES * Forty hand-designed acts, from gentle three-plate openers to the twelve-plate Five-Star Finale. Each act has its own title, its own pole layout, its own little twist. * Four modes -- the Show campaign, an Endless mode that grows forever, a Daily Wave seeded the same for every player worldwide, and Practice for any unlocked act. * A 1920s circus poster aesthetic: saturated red and brass, hand-drawn lithograph lines, halftone-dot print texture, a single warm spotlight on the bamboo. * A procedural calliope-and-brass-band soundtrack, synthesized live on your device. The tempo races as more plates go critical, then settles between acts. * Slapstick procedural sound effects -- the CLACK of a hand-tap save, the SMASH of a fallen plate, drum-roll warnings when a plate is about to go. * Twenty achievements ranging from "Step Right Up" (your first act) to "Headlining Act" (fifty stars). * Local SwiftData persistence for Show progress, Daily Wave attempts, achievements, and recent act results. * No accounts, no logins, no third-party SDKs, no analytics, no tracking. The privacy manifest matches the binary. * Rated 4+: no violence, no gore. The plates are just plates. A WORD FROM THE DEVELOPER Plate spinning is one of the oldest variety acts in the world -- a Tang-dynasty trick that made its way through vaudeville and the British music-hall. Wobbling is an attempt to translate the feeling of that act -- the careful sweep of attention across a row of spinning plates -- to a tiny touch screen. Step right up and keep them all spinning.

Screenshots

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