GamingNews

Subway Surfers Tag game slides onto Apple Arcade

Subway Surfers Tag is now available on Apple Arcade, Apple’s U.S.$4.99/month or $49.99/year game streaming service that has over 200 games. Apple Arcade is also available as part of the Apple One bundle.

The game is available for the Mac, iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and the Apple TV set-top box.

Here’s how Subway Surfer Tag is described: Challenge Guard in off-limit areas including the Railyard, Park, Docks, and Underground

– SURF INTO THE YARD AND ALWAYS KEEP MOVING

Join the Crew across multiple off-limit, interactive city locations. Skate over the retired trains in the railyard, play in the park after dark, pick up some power-ups at the cargo docks or investigate the mysterious underground. But watch out! Guard is not about to put up with these shenanigans and is hot on your heels – and this time, he’s brought reinforcements!

– SKATE, GRIND, TAG, AND ESCAPE

Chase your high score! Free skate across the arena, grinding rails, landing jumps, tagging objectives and blasting the clean up crew bots to gain sweet combo point action. Avoid Guard and his clean-up-crew as they chase you down to put an end to this foolishness.

– TOP TIER

You deserve something shiny. Reach high score milestones to collect arena Medals and use them to unlock the next chapter. Remember, you can always revisit earlier arenas to collect those previously out of reach Medals.

– BOOST YOUR HIGH SCORE

Pick up re-imagined Subway Surfers power-ups to increase your score multiplier, and set new high scores. Collect and spend star coins to use on upgrading your crew for all future runs. Complete mission sets to increase your score multiplier for future runs.

– WORK HARD, PLAY HARD

Are you up for the challenge? Keep pushing your High Score and feel the heat as Guard pulls out all the stops to put an end to the chase!

Subway Surfer Tag is a single-player game for ages 9 and older. It has gamepad support.

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.