IO games, the multiplayer arena format
The .io game genre, the multiplayer arena format pioneered by Agar.io in 2015 and Slither.io shortly after, is one of the few new browser-game categories of the past decade. The format combines real-time multiplayer with simple-to-learn rules and short sessions, producing a play pattern that scales from a two-minute lunch break to a multi-hour deep-engagement session. Technical demands (low-latency WebSocket connections, server-authoritative state, anti-cheat that actually works, and matchmaking that fills lobbies fast) are substantial, but the better .io games handle them invisibly.
What I look for: low input latency (a multiplayer game that feels laggy is unplayable), match durations short enough to be browser-friendly (5 to 15 minutes), no account requirement to play, and progression systems that reward skill rather than time investment. The .io catalogue below covers snake-arena, crowd-growth, territory-control, and a handful of tag/chase variants.
25 editor-reviewed games in this category.
Hex IO Arena
Multiplayer arena io with skill-bracket matchmaking. Twenty players per server.
Dial Swarm
Dial Swarm is a top-down arena game with fast respawn. Three game modes share the same map pool.
Dial Assault
Dial Assault layers a class system over the io format. Three classes, no cosmetic-only paid items.
Dial Horde
Dial Horde pairs swarm combat with a power-up rotation. Eight power-up types refresh on a thirty-second cycle.
Dial Blitz
Dial Blitz is a top-down arena game with fast respawn. Three game modes share the same map pool.
Dial Pack
Dial Pack runs a battle-royale mode with sixteen-player lobbies. Round length stays under five minutes.
Hex IO Skirmish
Top-down tank battle io with weapon-customisation. Sixteen players per server.
Dial Hunt
Dial Hunt is an io-style game with a single-attack input. Skill ceiling comes from movement and positioning.
Dial Stalker
Dial Stalker adds a base-capture mode over the standard arena loop. Two factions, four capture points per round.
Dial Royale
Dial Royale layers a class system over the io format. Three classes, no cosmetic-only paid items.
Dial Brawl
Dial Brawl is a top-down arena game with fast respawn. Three game modes share the same map pool.
Hex IO Battle
Bow-and-arrow battle royale io with projectile physics. Thirty players per match.
Dial Melee
Dial Melee pairs swarm combat with a power-up rotation. Eight power-up types refresh on a thirty-second cycle.
Hex IO Strike
Agar-style io with split-and-merge mechanic. Forty players per server.
Dial Frenzy
Dial Frenzy runs a battle-royale mode with sixteen-player lobbies. Round length stays under five minutes.
Dial Rampage
Dial Rampage is an io-style game with a single-attack input. Skill ceiling comes from movement and positioning.
Dial Conquest
Dial Conquest adds a base-capture mode over the standard arena loop. Two factions, four capture points per round.
Hex IO Clash
Paper.io-style territory io. Draw closed shapes to claim land.
Dial Dominion
Dial Dominion layers a class system over the io format. Three classes, no cosmetic-only paid items.
Dial Faction
Dial Faction is a top-down arena game with fast respawn. Three game modes share the same map pool.
Dial Clan
Dial Clan pairs swarm combat with a power-up rotation. Eight power-up types refresh on a thirty-second cycle.
Dial Guild
Dial Guild runs a battle-royale mode with sixteen-player lobbies. Round length stays under five minutes.
Dial Raid
Dial Raid is an io-style game with a single-attack input. Skill ceiling comes from movement and positioning.
Hex IO Mini
Basic eat-and-grow io with cosmetic monetisation and balance issues.
Dial Siege
Dial Siege adds a base-capture mode over the standard arena loop. Two factions, four capture points per round.