LG / game / GEOMETRY RUSH
REVIEW
Geometry Rush turns the LG remote into a one-button rhythm pad.
Inlogic Software's webOS take on the Geometry Dash-style one-button reaction runner — competent, brutally simple, and notably not the real Geometry Dash.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
Geometry Rush
INLOGIC SOFTWARE S.R.O.
OUR SCORE
6.6
LG
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
Geometry Rush is what happens when a Geometry Dash-shaped game has to live entirely inside one remote button. Inlogic Software, the Slovak studio behind a long bench of casual-arcade ports on LG and Samsung TVs, has built a competent one-button reaction runner in the genre that RobTop Games defined a decade ago — and given it a name that practically dares the search box to confuse the two. They are not the same game and not the same studio.
What’s left, once the name confusion is set aside, is a tight little reflex test. A cube auto-scrolls, the player times a single click, spikes either get jumped or they don’t. The Magic Remote’s centre button responds quickly enough that the genre’s core appeal — input precision tied to a backing beat — actually lands on a TV. Most webOS attempts at this kind of game fail on the latency check first.
The ceiling is low. A handful of levels, ads between attempts, no editor, no procedural variety. For LG TV owners who want a free five-minute time-killer and know what they are signing up for, it works. For anyone arriving here looking for the real Geometry Dash, the right move is to keep looking — that game is not on webOS, and Geometry Rush does not pretend hard enough to be a substitute.
Geometry Rush is what happens when a Geometry Dash-shaped game has to live entirely inside one remote button.
FEATURES
Geometry Rush is a one-button rhythm-reaction runner in the Geometry Dash lineage — a cube auto-scrolls through a side-on obstacle course of spikes, blocks, and gaps, and a single timed input keeps it alive. On LG webOS the input is the Magic Remote's centre button or the directional click; there is no pointer-aim, no inventory, and no menu depth beyond level select and high-score.
Levels are short fixed-track gauntlets keyed to a backing beat. Death is instant and the run restarts at the level head. Progress is unlock-based — clear one stage to surface the next — with a star-count or attempts metric carried between sessions.
The build is free, ad-supported by Inlogic Software s.r.o., a Slovak studio that ports the same casual-arcade catalogue across LG, Samsung, and a handful of mobile platforms. It is not affiliated with RobTop Games' Geometry Dash and shares only the visual grammar of that genre.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The remote-to-game latency is the part Inlogic got right. One-button reaction games live or die on input timing, and Geometry Rush registers Magic Remote clicks tightly enough that failed runs feel like the player's fault rather than the TV's. That is not a given on webOS, where some third-party games sit on a noticeable input lag.
The art is clean — neon-on-dark vector shapes, readable at typical living-room viewing distance, no busy backgrounds competing with the obstacle layer. For a free LG Content Store filler title, the visual presentation is more disciplined than most.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The name is the obvious problem. Players searching the LG Content Store for Geometry Dash will land here, and the disappointment is built into the marketing. Inlogic ships several near-name-collision titles across the casual-arcade space and this is one of them.
Content is thin. A handful of levels, no procedural generation, no level editor, no music customisation — once a player has memorised the tracks, the replay loop runs out fast. Ads between attempts are frequent enough to break the rhythm-game flow that the genre depends on.
CONCLUSION
Worth a free download for LG TV owners who want a five-minute couch reflex test and understand they are not getting the real Geometry Dash. Not worth recommending to anyone hunting the RobTop original — that game is not on webOS and no Inlogic substitute closes the gap. Watch for whether Inlogic ever ships a level editor; without one, Geometry Rush stays a curiosity rather than a habit.