title image

Neverball

Action

Ratings

Age

4+

Category

Action

Languages

English

Neverball is a part-puzzle, part-action game and an all-around test of skill. Tilt the floor to roll a ball through an obstacle course, balancing on narrow bridges and dodging moving platforms. With over 100 levels and multiple difficulty sets, it offers a deep challenge for fans of physics-based arcade games.

Dinsun Expert Review

Our Expert Score

80/100

Neverball is a faithful and high-quality port of the classic open-source tilt game. If you've ever played Super Monkey Ball, you'll know exactly what to do: you don't control the ball, you tilt the floor. It’s a test of extreme precision and patience.

The physics are spot on, which is vital for a game like this. The levels range from 'very easy' to 'absolute controller-breaking madness.' On mobile, the tilt controls feel natural, though there is a learning curve to the sensitivity. It’s a pure, skill-based arcade game that looks great and runs smoothly on modern hardware.

Dinsun reviewed on: Thu Feb 26 2026

Features

1

Accurate physics engine

2

Dozens of challenging levels

3

Smooth 3D graphics

4

Multiple ball skins to unlock

Tips & Walkthrough

Gameplays

Screenshot

screenshot 0screenshot 1screenshot 2screenshot 3screenshot 4screenshot 5screenshot 6screenshot 7screenshot 8screenshot 9screenshot 10screenshot 11screenshot 12screenshot 13screenshot 14screenshot 15screenshot 16screenshot 17

Q&A

Yes, Neverball supports external MFi controllers for even more precise control.

Ratings & Reviews

I loved this game as a child & now as an adult
Mon Aug 02 2021 Rachelanne520

I used to play this everyday 6-8th grade in the after school program. It was my favorite!!! I’m so excited that they have brought it to the App Store. I have waited for years for it!! I am so happy to play it again at 27.

So glad this game finally caught up to the platform designed for it!
Thu Jun 30 2022 Comander fox

I used to play this game a ton as a kid back in 2003-2005 on Linux. Back then the iPod/iPhone/iPad didn't exist like they do now, so you had to use the mouse or arrow keys. There was no tilt-interactive device yet. But now with the these devices in existence, it finally has the perfect companion!