As of 2026, an official Android port of The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth remains unavailable on the Google Play Store

, making it one of the most prominent "missing" titles in mobile gaming history. While the game has flourished on since 2017—recently receiving the massive Repentance Repentance+

updates—Android users have been left to navigate a landscape of emulation and community-led fan projects. The Void of Official Support

The absence of an official port is often attributed to developer Edmund McMillen’s historical focus on other platforms and the technical complexities of porting a game built on a proprietary engine. While other McMillen titles like The Legend of Bum-bo have made their way to Android,

remains exclusive to iOS in the mobile space, even as PC and console versions continue to receive official online multiplayer expansions in 2026. The Rise of Unofficial Alternatives

In the absence of a retail release, the Android community has developed several workaround methods:


Option 3: The "Fake" Ports to Avoid

Many YouTube videos and APK sites claim:

Red flags:


3. Scope definition


Performance Expectations by Device

Here’s a rough guide if you manage to run Isaac natively via emulation or the abandoned port:

| Device / Chipset | Expected FPS | Stability | Best Method | |----------------|--------------|-----------|--------------| | Snapdragon 888+ | 45-60 FPS | Moderate (overheating) | Switch emulation (Yuzu) | | Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 | 55-60 FPS | Good | Switch emulation | | MediaTek Dimensity 9000 | 30-45 FPS | Poor (driver issues) | Steam Link only | | Snapdragon 865 | 40-50 FPS | Good | Skyline (old build) | | Exynos 2200 | 20-30 FPS | Unstable | Avoid native emulation |

The Great Void: Why No Official Port Exists (Yet)

Let’s address the elephant in the womb. The Binding of Isaac: Rebirth (the definitive remake developed by Nicalis) is available on iOS. You can play it on an iPad and iPhone. So why not Android?

The official line from Nicalis and Edmund McMillen has been a mix of technical hurdles and business strategy. The primary culprits are:

  1. Fragmentation: Android has thousands of different device configurations (screen sizes, processors, GPU drivers). Ensuring that the complex physics and post-processing effects of Rebirth run smoothly on a budget Samsung from 2019 and a flagship foldable is a QA nightmare.
  2. Control Complexity: Isaac requires twin-stick precision. The iOS version relies on a floating virtual joystick for movement and a second for shooting. While this works on a large iPad, on a phone, your thumbs cover half the screen. Android’s lack of a standardized controller ecosystem (unified iOS/PS/Xbox support) makes this harder to optimize.
  3. Piracy: Historically, premium paid games on Android face piracy rates north of 90%. Nicalis has prioritized markets where paid software has a higher survival rate.

For nearly a decade, Android users were left in the cold, relying on clunky emulators (PPSSPP for the fan-made Isaac mods, or even Switch emulation, which is a legal and performance grey area). That is, until a secret project quietly surfaced.

Final Verdict: Should You Buy It?

Buy this port if:

Avoid this port if:

1. Executive summary (1 page)


The Modding Scene: Android-Specific Adjustments

The Isaac modding community has occasionally dabbled with Android. On forums like r/BindingOfIsaac and 4chan’s /vg/ board, developers have released patched APKs of the (leaked) Amazon port with quality-of-life fixes:

Warning: Downloading prepatched APKs from random Mega links is a security risk. These files often contain malware or data harvesters. If you go this route, scan everything with VirusTotal and never enter your Google account credentials into a modded app.