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Army Shooter Games

Updated June 2026 · 60 games · Curated by Nub Games Editorial

About these games

Army shooter games put a weapon in your hands and a battlefield in front of you. You play a soldier, line up shots, take cover, and push through mission objectives while fire comes back at you. Everything runs on HTML5 and WebGL inside a browser tab, so there is nothing to install. Click a title, let it load for a few seconds, and you are already aiming downrange. No account to create, no setup, no download bar to watch.

This page sits where Shooter Games and Action Games overlap. The shooter library covers anything built around aiming and firing; the action library covers anything fast and reflex-driven. Army shooters fall in the middle and pin down the setting: military forces, guns, battlefield firefights. That focus is tighter than either parent, since you skip past arcade shooters and target ranges to land on mission-based gun combat with soldiers. These lean teen, often around a PEGI 12 feel. For the armored side of the same conflict, the sibling page War Tank Games swaps the rifle for a tank.

The sub-types branch out. Some are first-person, where you see down the sights and clear rooms or trenches. Others are top-down or third-person, with squads you direct across a map. A few are wave-based, holding a position against advancing troops. Controls use WASD plus mouse-aim on desktop, or movement and fire buttons on touch. Sessions run short and punchy: a mission or two at a time, easy to drop in for a round and return to later.

Related combinations

FAQ

Are army shooter games free?

Yes, all the army shooter games here are free. They open in your browser on HTML5 and WebGL, with no cost to start and no signup required. Some show ads or offer optional items like weapon skins, but the missions and firefights are free to play. Jump into a round, finish a mission, and close the tab when you are done.

First-person or third-person view?

Both are available across these titles. First-person games put you behind the sights for direct aiming and close-quarters fights. Third-person and top-down ones pull the camera back so you can see your soldier or squad and the area around them. Some let you switch views. Each game's description notes its perspective, so you can pick the style of aiming you prefer.

What age are army shooters for?

These lean toward a teen audience, often around a PEGI 12 level. The combat shows soldiers and guns in conflict, but the style stays stylized rather than graphic. Most suit teens and older players, while younger kids may find the battlefield theme too intense. Ratings appear per title where available, so you can check a game before letting a younger player start.

Do these run without a download?

Yes, none of these need a download. Each runs inside your browser tab on HTML5 and WebGL, so there is nothing to install or update. Choose a title, wait a few seconds while it loads, and you are in the mission. This works across most modern desktop and mobile browsers without extra plugins, so you can play on the spot.