Avatar World: City Life

Games.

4.8

Advertisement

Installs

100 million+

Developer

PAZU GAMES LTD

Category

game

Content Rating

everybody

Developer Email

[email protected]

Privacy Policy

https://www.google.com/url?sa=j&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pazugames.com%2Fprivacy-policy%2F&uct=1754273052&usg=RmGAF0ms2Nb73B0HXFHyqD4Zw6I.&opi=113040485

Advertisement

Screenshots

Editor Reviews

Avatar World: City Life is like playing with a giant dollhouse that keeps adding new rooms. Instead of missions or battles, the focus is on hanging out, dressing up, and setting up whatever scene you feel like. Think pretend play—but with digital characters and colorful backdrops.

Everything looks cartoon-style. Big heads, bouncy animations, and bright backgrounds make it clear this is made for fun over realism. You might walk into a bakery, then teleport to a spaceship living room—it doesn’t always follow logic, but that’s part of the fun.

There’s no plot. No villains. No race against time. Just tap and explore. You can rearrange furniture, throw a pretend party, or just sit your avatar on a park bench and mess with the pets that wander by. It feels more like a toy than a game, and that’s the point.

The game gives you some free stuff at the start—characters, rooms, and accessories. But a lot of it is locked behind optional purchases. If you don’t want to spend anything, you’ll still have access to enough features to keep you entertained. But it’s easy to see how someone might want the extras after a while.

What stands out is how every room has its own theme and tiny details. Open the fridge in one house and it’s full of cupcakes. Tap the guitar in another, and it starts playing a tune. The game encourages you to poke around and see what surprises pop up.

The variety of places to visit is decent. You’ve got houses, stores, salons, and random places like space stations or camping sites. It’s not always consistent, but that kind of randomness works for something that’s meant to feel like make-believe.

If you like decorating, storytelling, or just creating silly situations with animated characters, this one delivers.

How to Play?

Step 1: Open the game after installing it. You’ll start with a default avatar standing in a central hub. There’s no sign-up, so you’re ready to go right away.

Step 2: Tap the map icon to open a list of locations. Some are unlocked immediately. Tap a spot—like “Family House” or “Mall”—to travel there. It loads in seconds.

Step 3: Move your avatar by dragging it. Tap on objects to make things happen. Open doors, sit on couches, flip light switches—each object usually does something.

Step 4: Tap the face icon to open the customization menu. You can swap hair, change outfits, and adjust facial expressions. You’ll see a mix of free and locked content.

Step 5: Add extra characters using the character bar. This is useful if you want to act out a dinner, teach a class, or create a hangout scene with friends.

Step 6: If you want to take a picture, use the built-in camera tool. It lets you frame a shot of your setup and save it to your device.

Advertisement

Disclaimer

1.Saacgames does not represent any developer, nor is it the developer of any App or game.
2.Saacgames provide custom reviews of Apps written by our own reviewers, and detailed informationof these Apps, such as developer contacts, ratings and screenshots.
3.All trademarks, registered trademarks, product names and company names or logos appearing onthe site are the property of their respective owners.

4. Saacgames abides by the federal Digital Milennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by responding to noticesof alleged infringement that complies with the DMCA and other applicable laws.
5.lf you are the owner or copyright representative and want to delete your information, pleasecontact us [email protected].
6.All the information on this website is strictly observed all the terms and conditions of Google AdsAdvertising policies and Google Unwanted Software policy

Advertisement