Arcade games in the Webnetic catalog cover score-attack shooters, twin-stick action, fast-loop runners, brick-breakers, retro-flavored bullet hells, and pinball variants. These are pickup-and-play titles, almost always single-player, that reward 10-minute sessions and asynchronous leaderboard play.
What to look for when buying arcade games on console
Arcade is the genre where Nintendo Switch hardware shines: handheld mode plus quick-resume turn arcade games into the strongest commute-friendly content on the platform. PS5 and Series X|S versions get the benefit of variable refresh rate displays where applicable, but the gameplay does not need it. Buying considerations for arcade are different from longer genres. Length is irrelevant — a $2 arcade title with five hours of unique content and infinite replay value is a better purchase than a $20 narrative game you finish once. What matters: input latency (60 fps is non-negotiable for the genre), high-score persistence (online leaderboards versus local-only), and difficulty curve (whether the game offers an Easy mode for casual sessions or only a hardcore single-difficulty pipeline). The catalog flags online-leaderboard support per platform — leaderboards typically require an active PSN, Nintendo Account, or Xbox Live login. Trophy and achievement design for arcade is often the most punishing of any genre: many titles ship a platinum that requires 1cc (one-credit clear) playthroughs or score thresholds that take 20+ hours of practice. We surface those benchmarks in the FAQ section of each detail page so you can plan. Local multiplayer support varies — some arcade indies ship couch co-op or versus modes, some are strictly single-player; the catalog filters by play mode so you can sort directly.























