Yes, absolutely, but only if you are a dedicated fan.

The Adam Port transforms the Android tablet from a Netflix machine into a roguelike beast. Being able to play a quick Greed Mode run while waiting for coffee, or fight Mother while in a Zoom meeting you should not be in, is a joy only Isaac fans understand.

But for casual players? Stick to Dead Cells or Soul Knight on the Play Store. They are designed for touch from the ground up. Isaac’s reliance on split-second reactions—like dodging Hush’s continuum shots or timing a bomb for a secret room—is frustrating on glass.

Score (for the Unofficial Port on a flagship device): 9/10
One point deducted for the installation headache and the lack of online co-op (which doesn't exist in any mobile version).

Microsoft’s cloud gaming service includes The Binding of Isaac: Repentance? No, it does not. This is a common mistake. Isaac is not on Game Pass cloud. Only the original Rebirth was briefly on Xbox consoles. Do not subscribe for Isaac.

There is no official Android port of The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth, Afterbirth, or Repentance sold by Nicalis or Edmund McMillen.
Any APK you find online is an unofficial, fan-made wrapper (usually based on the Windows version running via ExaGear or Winlator) or a malicious fake. This guide focuses on the best possible experience given these constraints.


For over a decade, The Binding of Isaac has reigned as the gold standard of roguelike dungeon crawlers. Created by Edmund McMillen (of Super Meat Boy fame) and Florian Himsl, the game’s twisted blend of The Legend of Zelda (1986) dungeons, randomized loot, and dark biblical allegory has captivated millions. From its humble Flash-based beginnings to the colossal Repentance DLC on PC and consoles, Isaac has crawled through the guts of his mother’s basement on nearly every device imaginable—except, officially, for the one you carry in your pocket.

The story of The Binding of Isaac on Android is a strange, frustrating, and ultimately hopeful tale. It is a saga of unofficial ports, hardware struggles, and a recent, miraculous resurrection. If you have ever wanted to cry, shoot tears, and fight infanticidal mothers on your morning commute, here is everything you need to know about the state of Isaac on Android in 2025.

The Android port is not cheap. At launch, the base game (which includes Repentance) retails for roughly $20-$25 USD—the same price as the Steam version. Unlike the PC version, you cannot buy Rebirth and upgrade later; you buy the whole package upfront.

Additionally, no mod support. The legendary Isaac modding community (including "External Item Descriptions," which is practically mandatory for modern play) is absent. You will have to memorize 700 items via trial and error.

Since no official port exists, Android users have turned to three main workarounds. Each has pros and cons.

If you are new to Isaac, it is a roguelike twin-stick shooter. You play as a crying child navigating a basement filled with grotesque monsters, religious imagery, and piles of poop. The gameplay loop is addictive: enter a room, defeat enemies, collect items that upgrade your character (often in body-horror ways), and try to survive.

The Android port includes the full Rebirth experience. You get hundreds of items, multiple playable characters, and the punishing difficulty that made the game famous. Nothing has been toned down. It is the full, console-quality game in your pocket, which is a technical marvel in itself.

The modern versions of the game (Rebirth onwards) run on a custom engine written in C++. Porting to Android generally involves utilizing the Android Native Development Kit (NDK). Unlike a Java/Kotlin port, the NDK allows for the execution of native C++ code, which is essential for the heavy procedural generation and enemy AI calculations occurring in real-time.