Conway's Game of Life
Conway's Game of Life Summary
Conway's Game of Life is a ad-supported Android app in Simulation by CraneStudio. Released in Nov 2019 (6 years ago). It has about 8.1K+ installs and 73 ratings with a 2.94★ (poor) average. Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 2.5K monthly active users and generates around $<10K monthly revenue (0% IAP / 100% ads). Store metadata: updated Feb 27, 2026.
Recent activity: 2.4K installs this week (2.9K over 4 weeks) showing exceptional growth , and 1.00 new ratings this week View trends →
Store info: Last updated on Google Play on Feb 27, 2026 .
2.94★
Ratings: 73
Screenshots
App Description
Conway's Game of Life is a game invented by mathematician John Conway in 1970
The Game of Life (an example of a cellular automaton) is played on an infinite two-dimensional rectangular grid of cells. Each cell can be either alive or dead. The status of each cell changes each turn of the game (also called a generation) depending on the statuses of that cell's 8 neighbors. Neighbors of a cell are cells that touch that cell, either horizontal, vertical, or diagonal from that cell.
The initial pattern is the first generation. The second generation evolves from applying the rules simultaneously to every cell on the game board, i.e. births and deaths happen simultaneously. Afterwards, the rules are iteratively applied to create future generations. For each generation of the game, a cell's status in the next generation is determined by a set of rules. These simple rules are as follows:
If the cell is alive, then it stays alive if it has either 2 or 3 live neighbors
If the cell is dead, then it springs to life only in the case that it has 3 live neighbors
There are, of course, as many variations to these rules as there are different combinations of numbers to use for determining when cells live or die. Conway tried many of these different variants before settling on these specific rules. Some of these variations cause the populations to quickly die out, and others expand without limit to fill up the entire universe, or some large portion thereof. The rules above are very close to the boundary between these two regions of rules, and knowing what we know about other chaotic systems, you might expect to find the most complex and interesting patterns at this boundary, where the opposing forces of runaway expansion and death carefully balance each other.
