Freeware flash-based games




















Average session length. Multiplayer features. Accessibility features. Jam Games. RPGs to Play. Grid-Based Dungeon Crawlers. Sort by. Pixel Art. RPG Maker. Turn-Based Combat. Dungeon Crawler. View all tags. New itch. Subscribe for game recommendations, clips, and more. Play in browser. Labyrinth of Legendary Loot.

A simple turn-based roguelike with over a hundred unique abilities and loot! Dominaxis Games. Cataphract OI. Experimental RPG about mercenaries battling eternal recurrence. Turn-based dungeon crawling roguelike. Don't get sick. Don't starve. Don't die. Realms of the Lost. All of these web browsers natively come with the flash player that show or play flash media content.

Although, in some web browsers, you need to first grant permission to play flash content. The process to grant permission to view flash content is simple. Still, I have included the steps to play flash content in the description of web browsers that needed it. However, there are also some web browsers that directly show flash content without asking for any permission.

In some of these web browsers with flash player, you also get basic features to interact with the flash content like Quality and Zoom. Other than that, you can find all the essential web browsing features in all these software like multi-tab interface, search bar, history, bookmarks, etc. A few of these web browsers also contain newer features like incognito mode, cloud synchronization, extension support, etc.

Go through the list to know more about these software. Lunascape is my favorite web browser because it directly plays flash content without asking your permission. Plus, it also offers tools to interact with the flash media content. It is a standard web browser that also supports flash content. It natively comes with the flash player that remains enabled all the time.

It also offers some features to interact with flash video or game content. Not only are there lots of multiplayer browser games, but many singleplayer ones are the early, free builds of games that went on to be popular full releases. If you're ready to get out there and kill some time, these are the games you should play. Looking for something else? Browser games are largely free to play, but we can also help you out with all the best free PC games , the best free games on Steam , and which games are free on the Epic Store right now.

If you're looking for something to play with pals—especially ones who aren't gaming on a high-end machine—check out these browser games you can play online with friends. Some are giant hectic battles like Agario and Slitherio, others are tabletop classics like Catan Online.

Though Agar. Your circle starts off very small, but when you eat all of the little colored dots around you, you become bigger. As a small circle, you move quickly and are able to dodge the bigger circles trying to eat you. When you get bigger, you need larger portions of food. To grow even more than these puny dots are allowing you to, you must eat the other players.

Since smaller players move faster, you can split your circle into two different circles of equal mass. When splitting your circle, the new one will shoot out, which is useful for enveloping the smaller player running away from you.

These circles grow depending on what they eat and do not stay the same size or move at the same speed. There are multiple modes, including team games. Once a bigger player gobbles you up, you have to restart as the smallest possible dot. The circle of life is brutal. For other similar options, try Hexar. Isleward doesn't look like a multiplayer game at first. It's a low-res roguelike that has you choosing what character you want to play before dumping you on your own into the city of Strathford.

In Strathford you get your bearings, learn how to queue up actions and explore. There are also a few low-level monsters that you can find and kill to level up. Eventually you'll run into other people and hopefully convince them to adventure with you. A party of different characters is much stronger than one player alone, and significantly more fun. There's a whole world to explore, loads of islands, and lots of loot to find.

Much like Agar. The twist: you're a snake. Your body gets longer as well as slightly wider as you eat the various dots that are littered around. This will cause them to vanish, leaving behind loads of body dots to collect. Consider pimping out your snake with a necklace that dangles as they slither. For something similar with a twist, try powerline. You're probably familiar with the style of Kingdom of Loathing, which has been going strong for years.

It's that sort of pseudo-mmo kind of thing, firmly embedded in the web interface, with drop down menus letting you select your attacks, and page refreshes for every new area. It's a little ugly, but Kingdom of Loathing isn't trying to be pretty.

It's succeeding at being funny. Really, really funny. Take, for instance, the classes. They make absolutely no sense, but they're funny because they're pun based. So I'm a Sauceror. I fling hot sauce in people's faces, and they get damaged, because hot sauce really hurts when it gets in your face. Making even less sense, they're Disco Bandits, who dance at their enemies, fuelled by moxie.

And this is all before you end up in the Haiku Dungeon, where not only are all the descriptions of your enemies in Haiku, but so are your attacks. The whole game is consistently absurd and amusing, from the enemy types, to the genre conventions it apes so cleverly. And while you can't directly play with other people, you can steal their stuff, join guilds and interact with them.



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