Flick Baseball Super Homerun
MINDWAYTECH CONSULTING SERVICES PRIVATE LIMITED
Screenshots



About this app
You swipe. The ball flies. Repeat. That’s the whole pitch, literally — and it works. Flick Baseball Super Homerun strips batting down to one thing: timing. The pendulum-style pitch meter swings, you judge the arc, and you flick your finger to smack the ball. Hit the sweet spot and the ball eats up pixels and distance; miss it and—well—watch your hopes fall into the outfield (or into a pile of ads, depending on your luck). Controls are single-thumb friendly: slide, snap, celebrate. No complicated menus, no infield shifts to memorize. Expect powerups (bats you unlock with coins), a handful of pitch behaviors—some that dip, some that break—and a scoreboard that dares you to beat your last ridiculous number. “Okay—how do I get better?” "Stop jerking the screen. Aim for the center of the swing." (Yes, I argued with my phone. Don’t judge.) Pause. Think about it: this isn’t trying to be a full simulator. It’s arcade baseball with cheap thrills, upgrade ladders, and a hint of zombie-themed marketing if the package you downloaded is that edition (the store copy mentions zombies—expect hats, not gore). If you like quick sessions on the subway or obsessively chasing distance milestones late at night, this fits. If you expect roster management or realistic batting cages—nope, not here. Expect ads and optional in-app purchases for faster bat unlocks. The physics lean arcade-ish (sometimes delightfully unpredictable; sometimes annoyingly floaty). Still, when you finally nail a perfect flick and the ball rockets out of the park—man, that little rush is pure, stupid fun. I’d recommend it to casual players, folks who love score-chasing, and anyone who enjoys a game that’s easy to pick up and impossible to stop once you get into one more turn territory.
Editor's Review
I’m not going to pretend I didn’t get hooked. I spent an embarrassingly long time chasing a single perfect homer — and yes, my phone almost became a projectile (don’t tell my cat). The appeal is obvious: one-motion control that rewards timing, a noisy little progression system of bats and coins, and a scoring loop that keeps whispering "one more" into your ear. But let’s be honest. The game isn’t flawless. The pitch behavior can feel inconsistent—some throws bend like they’ve got drama, some barely move. Ads are frequent enough to bruise your patience unless you pay to remove them. And—the upgrades help, but they don’t always solve the core: you still need that tiny millisecond of exactitude. Player: "Why so many ads?" Me: "Because mobile, my friend. Because mobile." Still, here’s the truth: when the physics align and you nail that center-of-mass flick, the payoff is ridiculous and satisfying. I loved the simple upgrade feedback (the bats really change the feel) and the variety of pitch types keeps it from getting stale right away. If you want deep baseball strategy, look elsewhere. If you want a fast, noisy, slightly addictive arcade batting game to kill time and occasionally feel like a legend—this is worth a download. No fuss. No pretending to be more than it is.
Pros
- Very accessible single-swipe batting — pick up and play in seconds
- A satisfying variety of bats with distinct feel and visible progression
- Short rounds ideal for quick sessions or score-chasing binges
- Surprising moments of joy when you nail a perfect, long-distance homer
Cons
- Pitch physics can feel inconsistent—timing sometimes relies on luck
- Ads are frequent unless you buy the ad-free option
- Progression can lean toward pay-to-skip for faster unlocks
- Not a full baseball sim—no team management or deep strategy
Additional Information
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