Physics games make up an important part of puzzle-solving games in the field of video games. Physics games give you the opportunity to witness and experience the widest spectrum of real physics in a video game format. It is designed to test the player’s skill in problem-solving techniques using physics as the puzzle-solving platform.

The puzzle solving video games also try to highlight your ability in logical solutions, your strategy to solve the puzzles and the correct sequence you choose to solve the puzzle in a given time. Some games also track how long it takes for the player to finish the game each time, allowing the player to compete with himself. The games open the doors of a fantasy world in front of you in which you may not have even thought of in your dreams. You can experience the explosion of a bomb on your computer screen and you could also masturbate the meat that suggests the effects of the game.

Real physics games have not only been confined to the consoles of computer screens, but have also added widespread applications on mobile phones. These electronic devices (computers and even mobile phones) have brought about technological revolutions in the field of physics video games. The advent of the Internet and broadband has fueled the spread of video games in all nooks and corners of the world, as most of the games are downloaded from the Internet to the computer and mobile phones.

In old games, when an explosion happened, it looked and sounded the same every time. Now, that’s where the physics technology comes in and now in games you’ll find that every time a rocket goes off or a ship sinks or a plane crashes, it would be different and look much more realistic. It is depicted in a manner that would appear approximately the same as it would if the incident had occurred in reality.

There are games that would give an estimated model of what would happen when a bullet hits a foot or ankle. Physics games can also play war games, which is the most fascinating of all games for children of today’s generation.

I-Play has produced a mobile phone game titled Nate Adams, a game based on cross-country motorcycle racing or commonly known as motocross. The game allows the player to mimic or emulate all the techniques of a Motocross superstar – Nate Adams.

Some of the most popular physics games on computer/mobile screens today are World of Goo, Angry birds, and Crayon physics.