Mobile play
Fish Quest Mobile
Fish Quest can load on some mobile browsers, but the experience depends on screen width, WebGL support, and whether you can clearly see the tension meter. Treat mobile as playable-but-sensitive, not the ideal setup.
Use Landscape Mode First
Rotate your phone before starting. Landscape mode gives the Unity frame more horizontal space and makes the tension meter easier to read. Portrait mode can make the interface feel cramped, especially during bigger fish fights where you need to watch pressure changes quickly.
Tap the Game Frame to Focus
If your touch inputs do nothing, tap inside the game once. Mobile browsers often move focus away from iframes after scrolling, opening menus, or tapping page buttons. Once the frame has focus, casting and reeling should feel more consistent.
Touch Reeling Advice
Use short taps or controlled presses while reeling. Long presses can cover important UI and make you miss tension spikes. If your finger blocks the meter, adjust your grip or use a larger device. The game is much easier when you can see the warning movement.
Performance Tips
Close other tabs, turn off low-power mode if it throttles the browser, and reload once if the first WebGL launch stalls. Some mobile browsers are stricter about memory and autoplay behavior, so a desktop browser or Chromebook may be smoother.
When to Switch to Desktop
Switch to desktop or Chromebook if the game frame is too small, the tension meter is unreadable, or the browser keeps scrolling the page during fights. Fish Quest is a timing game; if the device hides the timing information, it becomes harder than intended.
Mobile FAQ
Does Fish Quest work on iPhone or Android?
It may load on modern browsers, but desktop and Chromebook screens are usually more comfortable.
Why does the page scroll while I play?
The game frame may have lost focus. Tap inside the frame and use landscape mode.
Is landscape mode required?
No, but it is strongly recommended for seeing the tension meter and game UI.
Last updated: May 2026