The iOS apps will be available on Mac App Store starting this Thursday, November 12, when Apple will release macOS Big Sur to the public. These apps, of course, will be exclusive for Apple Silicon. Looking for FREE FPS games for your Mac? No worries, I’ve got you covered with the 12 best FREE Mac FPS Games! Download on The Mac App Store: https://geo.itunes.
In 2020, apps and games helped the world work, connect, and stay healthy in new and innovative ways. The App of the Year winners set the bar for them all. We celebrate this year’s selections, and the developers behind them, for their resounding positive impact.
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Wakeout!
Andres Canella- iPhone App of the Year
Zoom
Zoom- iPad App of the Year
Fantastical
Flexibits- Mac App of the Year
Disney+
Disney- Apple TV App of the Year
Endel
Endel- Apple Watch App of the Year
Of the many, many games we played this year, these are the ones that made the biggest impact. They surprised us with their innovation, delighted us with their beauty, and gave us a joyful way to stay connected.
Genshin Impact
miHoYo- iPhone Game of the Year
Legends of Runeterra
Riot Games- iPad Game of the Year
Disco Elysium
ZA/UM- Mac Game of the Year
Dandara Trials of Fear
Raw Fury- Apple TV Game of the Year
In a collection of incredibly fun games, this one stands out to become the Apple Arcade Game of the Year. The subtle, silly visuals, marvelous music, and brilliant gameplay make it a must-play experience.
Sneaky Sasquatch
RAC7 Games
How people use apps is a reflection of our broader culture. In 2020, developers overwhelmingly led a trend towards helpfulness and support for those who needed it most.
Connecting Families
Caribu
Caribu
Leading the Classroom
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Explain Everything Whiteboard
Explain Everything
Reinventing Play
Pokémon GO
Niantic
Making a Difference
ShareTheMeal
United Nations
Practicing Self-Care
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Shine
Shine
HTML5 is the development buzzword of the moment. It's the 'ajax ninja' of the last few years, so naturally it comes with its fair share of skepticism. Indeed, many have been writing about its seemingly never-ending spec, inconsistent implementations by browser makers, and even its inferiority to native apps. All are valid arguments against betting a real business on HTML5.
However, here's a hard example of why you absolutely should consider serious development in HTML5. In December of last year, we launched our little pure-HTML5 game Onslaught! Arena in the Google Chrome Webstore. Sales could be better, sure, but we also just launched the exact same game in the Mac App Store. The code is identical with negligible development time required to port it over to a completely different platform.
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Think about the business case for that. Normally it would take considerable resources to port a game to such a different platform. We know our game isn't exactly a AAA title, but if programmed from the ground up in Objective-C, our best guess is it would take a few months to develop. That's time that we can now spend on content updates or even a sequel.
How was it done? We just embedded a WebView in a native Cocoa app using Xcode. Is it inferior? Not noticeably so. On my MacBook Pro, the Chrome Web Store version ranges from about 50-250 FPS (frames per second) depending on how many monsters are on the screen. On the same computer, the Mac App Store version ranges from 30-100 FPS. (You can see this for yourself: type 'lddebug' while in-game to see debug information.) And despite nasty HTML5 audio issues, sound plays great in both versions.
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Surprisingly, the Chrome version runs faster than the native Mac version. While Safari and Chrome are both using WebKit as their rendering engines, Chrome is likely faster because V8 has wicked speed and its canvas rendering is hardware-accelerated.
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Either way, it runs great on both platforms and required almost no dedicated development time to port. If you're a developer, you should find this exciting. We certainly do!
Since you made it this far, you might like to read 'Our first week in the Chrome Webstore: the numbers' if you're into graphs and sales numbers (and who isn't!). If you'd like to learn more about our HTML5 development, including a tutorial on how to embed a WebView into a native Mac app, follow us on Twitter; we'll be writing about that soon.