LG / game / NIGHTWOLF
REVIEW
Nightwolf is a webOS curio with almost no public footprint.
A free game from Desoline Inc. that ships on the LG Content Store with so little metadata, marketing, or coverage that the install itself is most of the experience.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 2 MIN READ
Nightwolf is the kind of LG Content Store listing that exists more as a directory entry than as a product anyone is championing. Desoline Inc. has shipped on webOS before — Perfect Kick is the studio’s recognisable title — but Nightwolf arrives with no description text, no third-party coverage, no trailer, and no developer page promoting it. The icon, the publisher name, and the free price tag are the entire pitch.
That is genuinely all there is to evaluate from outside the install. webOS native games are a thinning category in 2026 as LG pushes the Gaming Portal and cloud-streaming partners, so a locally-installed free title from a publisher with prior shipping experience has at least a small case for existing. Whether the game itself rewards the curiosity that gets it onto a TV is something the listing makes no effort to communicate.
For LG owners who like to see what their Content Store hides in the long tail, Nightwolf is harmless to try. For everyone else, the absence of documentation is itself the review.
Nightwolf is the kind of LG Content Store listing that exists more as a directory entry than as a product anyone is championing.
FEATURES
Nightwolf is a free game from Desoline Inc., the small webOS-focused publisher behind a handful of LG Content Store titles (Perfect Kick is the one most TV owners might recognise). The store listing classifies it under games and ships it to LG smart TVs running webOS.
Beyond that, public detail is thin. There is no developer landing page for the title, no release notes, no third-party coverage, no trailer linked from the store, and no description text in the metadata feed App Comrade pulls. What loads on the TV is what you get — a webOS-native game that uses the Magic Remote for input and runs at the resolution the panel reports.
Pricing is free with no in-app purchase machinery surfaced in the listing. Treat that as the strongest known fact about the app.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
It exists, it installs, it runs on webOS without forcing a sideload or a cloud-gaming subscription. For a category — native LG TV games — that has shrunk noticeably as LG has steered users toward the Gaming Portal and cloud-streaming partners, a free locally-installed title from a publisher with prior webOS shipping experience is not nothing.
Desoline's Perfect Kick has held a place on the Content Store long enough to suggest the studio understands webOS app lifecycle and remote-input quirks. That institutional knowledge is the most defensible reason to take a chance on this listing rather than a one-off shovelware upload.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The information vacuum is the problem. With no description, no screenshots framed editorially, no patch notes, and no press coverage, a prospective installer has nothing to evaluate beyond the icon and the publisher name. That is a marketing failure as much as a product one — and on a TV store where discovery is already brutal, it is a self-inflicted wound.
The free price tag carries the install decision; nothing else in the listing does. A one-paragraph description and three labelled screenshots would meaningfully change this review.
CONCLUSION
Nightwolf is a webOS curio: a free Desoline Inc. game on the LG Content Store with almost no public footprint to evaluate against. LG TV owners who collect native webOS games out of completionism will find it harmless to try; everyone else has no reason to seek it out over the Gaming Portal's cloud catalogue. Watch for whether Desoline ever bothers to fill in the store metadata — that, more than any patch, would change the picture.