Samsung Galaxy / Games > Casual / TENNIS GO!
REVIEW
Tennis Go! is the Galaxy Store's tennis filler, not its tennis game.
A barebones casual tennis app with no screenshots, no description, and a publisher swap from the Google Play original. It plays like the genre's least committed tier.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 10, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Tennis Go!
JOAT CONTRACTING LIMITED
OUR SCORE
4.2
SAMSUNG GALAXY
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
The Galaxy Store version of Tennis Go! arrives with the giveaway tells of a side-loaded port: no screenshots, no description, no developer-supplied media of any kind. The Google Play original is published by ASANTE APPS; the Galaxy Store listing names JOAT CONTRACTING LIMITED. The game itself — a one-tap, timing-based tennis loop in the long shadow of every Voodoo and Kwalee hyper-casual hit — is the same. The packaging is what’s different, and the packaging is empty.
That matters more than it sounds. The Galaxy Store has a genre of apps that exist primarily to occupy a search result, and Tennis Go! reads as one of them. With “500+” installs on Google Play and a Galaxy Store rating that simply says 5 — a number Samsung’s storefront emits with so little signal that we treat it as null — there is no real audience verdict to lean on yet. What’s left is the gameplay, which is the same minute-long arcade tennis you have already played a dozen times under different names.
There is a real category of Galaxy Store games whose primary feature is being installable, and Tennis Go! is one of them. Reviewing it on its own terms is almost beside the point — the more honest read is what it says about the storefront around it.
There is a real category of Galaxy Store games whose primary feature is being installable, and Tennis Go! is one of them.
FEATURES
Tennis Go! is a one-tap arcade tennis game in the hyper-casual mould. Tap to time a return; matches resolve in short, AI-driven rallies designed to fit the seconds between other things. The Google Play listing flags it as ad-supported with PEGI 3 rating; no in-app purchases are disclosed. There is no career mode, no roster, no tournament structure visible from the storefront — just the central loop.
On the Galaxy Store specifically, the listing ships with no screenshots, no feature image, and no long or short description. The icon is the only thing the storefront can show a browsing user. Category is Games > Casual. The build was last updated 14 April 2026.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The one thing the app gets right is honesty about scope. There is no upsell wall, no pretence of being a tennis simulation, no fake roster of real players. It is a small game that wants ten seconds of your attention, and it asks for nothing that it cannot deliver in that window. For a phone-game checked while a kettle boils, that bargain is fair.
The Samsung-side build also runs without the Google Mobile Services dependency that some hyper-casual games carry over awkwardly, which is the entire reason a Galaxy Store variant of a Google Play title exists in the first place.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
Almost everything else. A Galaxy Store listing with zero screenshots and no description is a self-inflicted wound — a Samsung Galaxy user browsing the casual sports shelf has no way to know what they're about to install. The publisher mismatch between Google Play (ASANTE APPS) and Galaxy Store (JOAT CONTRACTING LIMITED) deepens the mystery without ever being explained on the listing itself.
The gameplay, on the evidence available, is undifferentiated. There is no obvious mechanic — spin, court positioning, shot type, character progression — that distinguishes Tennis Go! from the half-dozen other one-tap tennis games the storefront also carries. Ad density on the Google Play original is the genre default, which is to say frequent.
CONCLUSION
Install Tennis Go! if you specifically want a tennis-shaped fidget on a Samsung Galaxy device that the Play Store version doesn't reach you on. Anyone with Google Play access should start there, where at least the listing has screenshots and an install count. For everyone else, the Galaxy Store has better-presented casual sports games — including several with the same one-tap timing loop and far more effort spent on the storefront page. This one earns a pass.