Sharing your game
Once you’ve created and customized a game, there are two ways to share it:
Tap Publish → Share to Arcade to make your game publicly visible on the Community Arcade. It becomes discoverable by all Gummy users and can be played, liked, and remixed by the community.
Share a play link
Tap Share → Copy Link to get a direct URL to your game. Anyone with the link can play it instantly in their browser — no app download required.
This is perfect for:
- Sending to friends who don’t have Gummy
- Posting on social media (TikTok, Instagram, Discord…)
- Sharing with classmates or teachers
- Getting feedback before publishing publicly
Play links work on any device and any browser. Your game runs at full quality with no installation required.
Remixing other creators’ games
Remixing is one of Gummy’s most powerful creative features. Find any game in the Arcade and build on top of it.
How to remix
- Open any game in the Community Arcade
- Tap the Remix button (the fork icon)
- The game opens in your editor as a new copy
- Make any changes you want — character, physics, levels, art, mechanics
- Publish your remix as its own game under your profile
Your remix will credit the original creator automatically.
What you can change in a remix
Everything. A remix is a full copy of the original game — you have the same editing access as if you’d created it yourself. You can:
- Completely overhaul the art style
- Change the genre (turn a platformer into a shooter)
- Swap every character and enemy
- Redesign the levels from scratch
- Tune the physics to change the entire feel
Remix etiquette
- Be creative — the best remixes add a genuine twist, not just a palette swap
- Credit inspiration in your game description
- Remix to learn — studying a great game’s settings is one of the fastest ways to level up your own skills
Going viral in the Arcade
The Arcade ranks games by plays, likes, and shares. Here’s what the community tends to love:
- Unique concepts — games with a surprising mechanic or unexpected combination of genres
- High difficulty ceiling — games that are hard to master keep players coming back
- Aesthetic consistency — a cohesive art style always performs better than mixed visuals
- Short, punchy sessions — games you can play in 60–90 seconds get more replays
- Clever remixes — taking a popular game and making it dramatically different tends to spike on the Arcade