Orbit Kick is a casual football-kicking game released in 2025, built around one simple goal: smack the ball at the perfect moment and watch how far it can travel. It starts normally on a field, but before long you’re kicking past towns, deserts, and even drifting into the sky. There isn’t a big story or complicated rules—just timing, upgrades, and the satisfaction of sending the ball farther than your last attempt.

Every round begins with your player waiting beside the ball. A power bar moves back and forth, and all you have to do is tap or click when the bar hits that “just right” spot. A clean strike gives you height and distance. A sloppy strike? The ball drops early, and the run ends quickly.
The game keeps things fresh by gradually raising the distance targets. Hitting goals like 1,000 or 2,000 meters unlocks new areas and new ball designs. Each ball handles a little differently, but the main idea stays the same—push your longest record a bit farther every time.
The controls are extremely simple: one tap or click, and the ball launches. Everything comes down to rhythm and timing. After the kick, the ball rolls, bounces, flies, and sometimes gets lucky with terrain angles that give it extra push.
Coins earned from distance can be used on three key upgrades:
Power to make the kick stronger
Bounce for longer rolls after landing
Offline income that slowly builds up coins while you’re away
If you want another timing-heavy game, Crossy Road is a quick-reflex hopper.
For another distance-based challenge, Bat Smash offers long-hit baseball swings.
Don’t rush the meter. Wait for the cleanest timing instead of spamming clicks.
Power matters early, bounce matters once the ball starts reaching long slopes.
Crossy Road – Quick-move traffic dodging
Bat Smash – Baseball power-hit builder
What unlocks new levels?
Reaching the required distance automatically opens the next area.
Do upgrades matter a lot?
Yes—especially bounce, since it can add hundreds of meters.
Are ball types different?
Some give extra roll or better airtime, which helps with long runs.