Angry Gran Run
Summary
Angry Gran Run is a fast-paced endless runner in which the player controls an athletic grandmother character escaping a confinement facility through vibrant city environments. The article below documents the title's core loop, mechanics, and progression systems as described by the original publisher.
Gameplay loop and mechanics
The player dashes through dynamically generated streets, dodging obstacles that range from roadworks and moving vehicles to large set-pieces such as dinosaurs and seasonal decorations. Movement combines tilting, swiping, and jumping inputs to maintain velocity while clearing hurdles. Street layouts vary between runs, and incidental destruction — tipping pedestrians, knocking through market stalls, sliding under low clearance — provides immediate feedback. The base running speed rises steadily the further the player progresses, raising the input precision required to survive. Character animation leans into comedy, which is a defining stylistic choice of the title.
External reference (original publisher's product page): visit the publisher's listing for Angry Gran Run.
Modes and progression
Angry Gran Run incorporates a collection system built around in-run coin pickups, which the player reinvests into upgrades such as shields, coin magnets, and score multipliers. A cosmetic-progression layer unlocks alternative outfits — prehistoric reptile, classical historical figure, futuristic warrior, and others — each with bespoke animations. Daily challenges issue focused objectives (clearing a specific number of barriers, knocking over a set number of targets) and yield additional coin rewards on completion. The interface surfaces personal best records, supporting the high-score loop typical of the endless-runner genre. The audio design uses whimsical voice clips and upbeat music to reinforce the comedic tone. The title is widely cited as a reference example of the endless runner sub-genre.
Sources & references
- Original publisher listing: https://poki.com/ru/g/angry-gran-run
- Editorial article last reviewed: June 2026