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A game where players control a giant shark on a mission to destroy everything in sight.
Developer: D. Stevenson
- 4.3
- Score
Angry Shark Miami is a wild, chaotic browser game that throws you straight into the deep end - literally. You take control of an angry, constantly hungry shark that has somehow found itself in the waters of Miami, and your only goal is to destroy, eat, and cause mayhem. From the start, the controls are simple but responsive: swim, dive, leap into the air, and snap your jaws shut on anything that moves. The satisfaction of chomping down on unsuspecting swimmers or leaping into a helicopter never really gets old. There's a cartoonish charm to the whole thing - the visuals are bright and exaggerated, with over-the-top reactions when the shark hits a boat or eats a police officer. It's not aiming for realism at all, and that's kind of the beauty of it. It's dumb, loud fun, in the best way possible. What really works in Angry Shark Miami is its sheer momentum. The shark moves fast, the destruction comes nonstop, and every few seconds something new happens - more enemies, more chaos, and often, more absurd upgrades. One minute you're eating tourists, and the next you're breaking apart a yacht while dodging incoming missiles. There's even a kind of progression system: the more you eat and destroy, the more points you earn, and those can unlock bigger, crazier sharks or temporary power-ups. It's simple, but that loop of "eat-destroy-repeat" is surprisingly addictive. I found myself grinning every time the shark bounced off a rooftop or dragged a jet down into the ocean. Sure, it's ridiculous and doesn't require any real strategy, but that's exactly what makes it so playable. You dive in for five minutes and end up staying much longer. At the end of the day, Angry Shark Miami isn't trying to be subtle or deep - it's all about creating fast-paced chaos and letting you feel like a total monster, just for fun. It doesn't overcomplicate things with difficult mechanics or boring tutorials. You start the game, you wreck everything, you get points, and you laugh at how absurd it all is. It's ideal for a quick break or if you just want to turn your brain off and watch the world (or at least Miami) burn. There's something weirdly satisfying about playing as a shark that defies gravity and logic just to eat more people. And let's be honest, how often do games let you bite through a blimp and dive back into the ocean with a flaming trail behind you?