APP COMRADE

Google Play / game_casual / FRISKY FREAKS

REVIEW

Frisky Freaks is a tiny indie casual game with almost no public footprint.

Released in May 2024 by a solo developer credited as Mohammad Alizadeh, the game has accumulated six Play Store ratings and no store-side description. It is, in every measurable sense, a long-tail listing.

BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 2 MIN READ

Google Play

Frisky Freaks

MOHAMMAD ALIZADEH

OUR SCORE

6.0

GOOGLE PLAY

★ 3.3

PRICE

Free

Frisky Freaks is the kind of Play Store listing that reminds you the Android catalogue’s long tail is mostly silence. Released in May 2024 by a solo developer credited as Mohammad Alizadeh, filed under Casual, free to download, and updated as recently as April 2026 — it is, by every measurable surface signal, an active project. It is also a project that no one has heard of. Six rating submissions in two years. No store description text. No press coverage. No community footprint visible from outside the listing itself.

That makes Frisky Freaks an interesting object to review, but a difficult one to recommend or warn off in the usual way. The standard editorial moves — quoting the developer’s pitch, comparing it to a peer in the genre, reading the negative reviews for a real complaint — all require a base layer of public information that this listing does not provide. What the metadata does tell you: three screenshots, a feature graphic, a title that telegraphs a casual-game tone, a current April 2026 build, and the simple fact that the developer is still showing up.

The right way to read a listing this thin is not to invent context that isn’t there. It is to score the things the metadata genuinely supports — pricing, maintenance, listing quality, audience signal — and to be honest that the game itself, as a play experience, sits behind a wall that the developer has not yet bothered to open. That is the review.

Frisky Freaks is the kind of listing that reminds you the Play Store's long tail is mostly silence.

FEATURES

Frisky Freaks is a free Android game filed under Google's Casual category. It was published on 10 May 2024 by a developer credited as Mohammad Alizadeh and most recently updated in April 2026. The Play Store listing carries an icon, three phone screenshots, and a feature graphic — but no written description text in the standard English locale field.

Pricing is straightforward: free download, no listed price. There is no indication on the store page of in-app purchases, subscriptions, or ads in the metadata fields that Google exposes. Six users have left ratings since launch, averaging 3.3 out of 5 — the smallest possible sample from which to draw any conclusion at all.

The "casual" category designation is the only genre signal Google provides. Without a description, there is no listed feature set, no character roster, no mode list, and no controls explanation. A prospective player is choosing on the strength of the screenshots and the title alone.

MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The listing exists, the build is current — an April 2026 update almost two years after release suggests the developer is still shipping. Solo indie casual games on the Play Store more often go silent within months; continued maintenance is a real, if quiet, signal.

The game is genuinely free with no listed in-app purchase scheme in the store metadata. For the casual category specifically, that distinguishes it from the dominant business model, which is free-to-install with aggressive ad and monetisation layers on top.

ROOM TO IMPROVE

The missing store description is the structural problem. Google gives developers a generous text field to explain the concept, the controls, the appeal — and Frisky Freaks leaves it empty. Casual-game discovery on Android already runs on screenshot-thin signals, but with zero descriptive copy, the listing fails the basic "what is this and why would I play it" test that determines whether a curious browser converts to an install.

Six ratings in nearly two years tells its own story. The game has not found an audience, has not been featured, has not picked up coverage on the Android gaming press, and has not generated enough word-of-mouth to clear even the lowest threshold of Play Store visibility. Whether that's a marketing problem or a product problem is genuinely impossible to say without first being able to read what the game claims to be.

The 3.3 average across that handful of ratings is not encouraging, but the sample is too small to weigh meaningfully against the listing itself.

CONCLUSION

Install Frisky Freaks if you actively enjoy excavating the Play Store's deep long tail and want to support a solo developer still updating a niche release. Skip it if you want to know what you're downloading before you tap install — the store listing simply does not tell you. A description rewrite is the single highest-leverage thing this listing could do for itself.