> # Welcome to GameGrinOS v1.01 > # How can I help you? > # Press ` again to close
>
Hello… | Log in or sign up
Successful Apps and Games that Came from Australia AD

Successful Apps and Games that Came from Australia

We live in a technologically advanced world where we can't do anything without our cell phones. Talking about the cell phone gives us access to the whole world in our hands. We install many useful apps for socialising, relaxing, gaming, work, etc.

After intensive research, we learned that there is a huge talent pool of amazing developers in Australia who have developed wonderful apps and games that are famous all over the world.

In the past ten years, Australian developers have overpowered everyone globally. The list is quite long, but we have included a few games and apps. You will find various games and apps, from mobile pokie apps to cute funny games.

Today, we will talk about some of the most successful apps and games that came from Australia.

1. Canva

We all know Canva. It is one of the most-used apps for graphic design. To date, Canva has raised around $40 million for earning a business value of $345 million. In 2021, the business grew to a $1 billion market valuation.

The CEO and co-founder of Canva, Melanie Perkins, is one of the most successful CEOs in the world. She loves to empower the modern workforce, and hence Canva has around 10 million users.

2. Afterpay

Afterpay was launched in 2014. It is one of the most famous and successful startups in Australia. Afterpay has revolutionised the traditional way of making payments. Nick Molnar founded the company.

Afterpay allows you to buy anything and pay for it in four installments. The most fantastic thing about Afterpay is that it makes you shop for anything with zero interest. Afterpay has joined hands with many Australian leading stores like Glue, TopShop, Hype DC, Marcs, etc.

3. Fruit Ninja

Fruit Ninja is a sword-slicing game that makes you slice the fruits and neglect the bombs. Brisbane studio Halfbrick developed this game.

Fruit Ninja took a brand new platform, the iPhone, and made the actual game for its touch interface. The genius of the sport is that within seconds everyone can immediately recognise a way to play — without a doubt, swipe your finger throughout the display screen to slice fruit. It helped kickstart an entire enterprise of mobile videogames and is a masterclass in game design.

4. Inamo

Peter Colbert founded Inamo. This app allows you to make payments with its wearable tech products without any wallet.

Its products have NFC payment chips, and hence they can be attached to your wristband or watch quite easily. Most startups are a result of exhaustive and extreme brainstorming sessions. But, in Inamo's case, its idea and execution turned into on-spot due to the capabilities and knowledge from a couple of industries.

In the past few years, Inamo carried out splendid milestones along with elevating a whopping $1.5m of seed funding; launched three wearable products: The Classics, The Curl, The Wave; penetrated a profitable niche market; have become the primary of its type to promote pay as you go wearable gadgets and more.

Inamo has additionally obtained massive acclamation from the press. It has been featured in numerous massive publications, including Business Insider, Financial Review, and The Australian.

5. Journey

In this wordless indie-journey game, gamers undertake the avatar of a mysterious robed man or woman as they discover a sparse, barren region landscape by skipping enormous ruins and adventure closer to a distant mountain.

Journey is a visually beautiful tale instructed without language and can make you cry at the end. It's a brilliant example that videogames can be emotional and are not always about violence.

Journey can teach you that videogames can have emotional influences a long way beyond simply the fun of victory or unhappiness of defeat.

Final words

Hence, this was the list of some of the most successful apps and games from Australia and won everyone's heart. We’re sure there’s still MUCH more to come from that amazing country.

Charlie Smith

Charlie Smith

Staff Writer

Writing like he plays games - poorly

Share this:

COMMENTS