A Small World Cup
All trademarks belong to their respective owners.
Description
There’s something deeply satisfying about watching a ragdoll soccer player faceplant into the net just after slamming an opponent in the gut, and in A Small World Cup, that’s not a glitch, it’s the game plan. Rujo Games’ chaotic take on the beautiful game is a slapstick 1v1 showdown packed into 45-second mini-matches that turn soccer physics on their elastic head.
One Player, One Dream, Seven Rounds
After picking my national team (Viva Argentina!), I was dropped into a 7-round World Cup mode, tasked with taking out a lineup of increasingly deadly AI teams. With each bounce and poorly aimed launch, I learned the core rule: score more goals before time runs out, or crash out early and start over. It's simple, it’s brutal, and it’s totally addictive.
Drag, Aim, Release, Then Pray
Gameplay boils down to one chaotic mechanic: drag your player, aim, and release. That’s it. Whether I was playing on mobile or a web browser, the controls felt snappy. But the ragdoll physics? Not so much. One mistimed slam, and I’d bounce into my own goal. One smart ricochet off an opponent’s body, and I’d win the round with milliseconds left on the match timer.
More Than Just Grass
Between rounds, I duked it out on colorful fields, from traditional green turf to sun-bleached beach stadiums. The vibrant graphics and immersive crowd sound brought surprising energy to each goofy match, especially as I clawed toward the championship trophy in the Cup America and Europa League modes.
A Small World Cup is what happens when FIFA ’98 takes a shot of espresso and bellyflops into a bounce house. Ridiculous? Yes. Rewarding? Absolutely.
Controls
- Left Click = Pick Player
- Cursor = Drag Player
Play More Soccer Games on TapTapShots.net
Information
Language
English
Category
H5 Games
Gender
Male
Female