Alien Seeker: Find It & Shoot
Arcloom
Screenshots



About this app
I downloaded this at midnight and then swore I’d only play one level. Nope. Alien Seeker: Find It & Shoot is a pick-up-and-play hidden object puzzle where the job is simple: spot the sneaky aliens, tap to inspect, and—when you get the chance—shoot through a scope for extra fun. Controls are finger-friendly: pinch to zoom, tap to highlight, and swipe around 3D-ish scenes that hide critters in plain sight. Levels are short (two to five minutes), which means it’s perfect for coffee breaks, bus rides, or pretending you’re doing chores. Gameplay-wise it’s straightforward. Each stage drops you into a cluttered scene—cafés, garages, dusty attics—stuffed with props that try to hide those green guys. The difficulty rises slowly: early rounds are laughably easy, middle tiers make you squint, and later ones will make you curse at a lamp. There’s a tiny shooting twist: some aliens need a scoped shot (calm down — it’s playful, not hardcore), which breaks up the tapfest. Player types? If you like slow, zen-ish puzzle hunting — this is for you. If you want high-score speedruns or massive loot trees — this might not be. There’s no steep learning curve, no fiddly combos, and no absurd menus (thank god). It’s meant for casual players who like to exercise their eyeballs. "Did you see the one under the muffin tin?" — "Which muffin? The cursed blueberry?" Pause. Think about that. The game isn’t trying to reinvent anything. It’s not pretending to be a triple-A masterpiece. It’s a focused little toy that either scratches the “I need a brain break” itch or it doesn’t. Expect short bursts of satisfaction, occasional “wait what?” moments when an alien blends into a pattern, and a calming loop that is both lazy and oddly compelling. If you want specifics: look for clearly labeled levels, a hint button (limited?), and steady difficulty pacing. If any feature is missing from the description above, I’d ask: is there a premium remove-ads option? Are there daily challenges? Those would be nice additions, but the core is solid and friendly.
Editor's Review
I’m the kind of person who judges a casual game by two things: does it make me keep playing after the first level, and does it annoy me enough to toss my phone across the couch. Alien Seeker mostly passes the first and fails the second — in a good way. I kept coming back at odd hours (2 a.m., of course) because the levels are short and the little victories — finding that final alien hiding in a coffee cup shadow — feel earned. Controls are crisp. Zooming feels natural. The scoped shots add a surprisingly satisfying click (like popping bubble wrap but with alien heads). I did get stuck on one stage for nearly two hours — yes, two — and my thumb actually started sweating (gross, yes). That’s both a compliment and a complaint: sometimes the hiding spots leans borderline unfair. The game isn’t flawless. Ads pop up between rounds (you’ll forgive them or you won’t), and after a solid dozen levels the art starts to feel a tad repetitive. Also — and this matters — the game doesn’t pretend to have deep progression systems. No big upgrade trees, no long-term goals beyond beating the next scene. That’s not always a flaw, but don’t expect a time-sink RPG. "You sure that was an alien?" — "Pretty sure. Or it’s an oddly sentient lamp." Would I recommend it? Yes, if you like short, focused puzzle bursts and don’t mind the occasional ad or a level that will make you swear. If you want persistent long-term goals, look elsewhere. For late-night hide-and-seek vibes though, Alien Seeker hits the sweet spot.
Pros
- Short, 2–5 minute levels that fit quick play sessions
- Tight tap-and-zoom controls with a satisfying scoped-shot mechanic
- Steady difficulty curve—starts easy, then actually challenges you
- Nice variety of cluttered scenes that reward careful observation
Cons
- Some stages feel repetitive after extended play
- Occasional frustrating hitboxes or unclear hiding spots
- Ads appear between rounds (premium ad-free option unclear)
- No deep progression or long-term meta to chase
Additional Information
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