Stack Ball Jumper - Endless Runner Game
About the Game
Stack Ball Jumper is an arcade game in which you have to get to the very end by smashing all the rotating platforms. Sounds simple enough ?! No matter how it is! The falling of the ball is prevented by multi-colored platforms, which are easily broken, but among them there are black ones that do not allow to fall below. If you run into them, the ball will split into pieces, and you will have to start all over again! But if you manage to accelerate the ball to maximum speed, then it can break even these obstacles! Each player can choose their own style: fly at full speed to victory, or stop and wait for the right moment. Instructions: • use your mouse on your computer or touch your finger on your mobile device to play
Game Mechanics
An Endless Runner is a fast‑paced action mechanic where your character moves forward automatically — running, jumping, rolling, or sliding — through an infinitely generated path, track, or corridor. You never stop; the only controls are reactive: tap to jump over gaps, swipe to slide under barriers, tilt to switch lanes, or tap again to perform special moves like rolling or wall‑running. The environment is procedurally generated, meaning no two runs are identical. As you survive longer, speed gradually increases, obstacles become denser, and reaction windows shrink. The core goal is achieving the highest distance or score before crashing. Collectible items (coins, gems, power‑ups) appear along the path, rewarding risky detours or precision timing. Power‑ups might include temporary shields, magnets that attract nearby items, or slow‑motion effects. Unlike traditional platformers, there is no finish line — the run ends only when you hit an obstacle, fall into a pit, or run out of time. Some versions add missions (collect X items in one run), character unlocks, or daily leaderboards. Endless Runner mechanics reward split‑second reflexes, pattern recognition, and muscle memory. Perfect for players who enjoy high‑speed action, chasing high scores, and the addictive "one more try" loop.