Super Heroes Crazy Truck
Santa Hill Climbing
Teeth Runner
Ultimate Moto
Wednesday Halloween Cave
Wave Dash
Deepest Sword
Apple & Onion The Floor is Lava!
The Skull Kid
Xytrian Runner
Prehistoric Shark
Tequila Zombies
Drive Fun
Mao Mao: Dragon Duel
Neon Dash: Cyber Run
Baby Chicco Adventures
Super Oscar
Flappy Bird Valentine's Day Adventure
Super Olivia Adventure
Firebot Shooter
Mondo Hop
Geometry Vibes
Friday Night Flappin' Bird
Cactus McCoy
My Gumball Man 2
Wings Rush
Noob in Geometry Dash
My Craft: Craft Adventure
Chainsaw the Children
Surfing Unicorn
Black Knight
Pou
Tequila Zombies 2
Super Pizza Quest
Life Shift
Sonic the Hedgehog HTML5
Ball Hero Adventure: Red Bounce Ball
Deep in the Lab
Raging Punch 3D
Canoniac Launcher Xmas
The Adventure of the Three
Bloo Kid 2
Typing Fighter
Bob Vax
Senya and Oscar 2
Tom and Jerry: Run Jerry
Hobo 2 — Prison Brawl
Stickman Maverick : Bad Boys Killer
Flipping Dino Run
Ant-Man Combat Training
Flappy Pig
Jim World Adventure
I am an Excavator Runner
Super Peaman World
Zombie Derby 2
Snowball: Platformer
Rogue Soul 2
Dora Stunts
Larry World
Short Ride
Neko's Adventure
Cut in Half
Pink Cuteman
Absorbed 2
Frizzle Fraz
Entity 303 vs Herobrine
Run Run Duck
Forest Range Adventure
2 Player Dino Run
Tung Tung Sahur Big Stick
City Siege 3: Jungle Siege
Flappy Ball
Side-scrolling is a game genre where players view the game world from the side and the world scrolls more into view as the player reaches a screen boundary. As more memory became available to game developers with the release of later game consoles, they found new tricks to provide bigger worlds for players. It was most common to see horizontal side-scrolling like in Super Mario Bros (1985) for the NES. However, some racing and shooter games would use verticle scrolling. Before side-scrolling games, worlds only displayed one screen at a time similar to a board game. However, some older arcade games used reels to create a similar effect only using analog technology. Today, 3D uses new tricks and side-scrolling is no longer the only way to have expansive virtual worlds. Yet, the retro nostalgia and simple mechanics has meant the side-scrolling game genre remains popular.