Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4’s campaign and multiplayer reveals brought the modern military shooter back to the front of the conversation. Activision will not release it on a phone, but the genre on Android is still busy in 2026, with a healthy mix of Counter-Strike-style competitive games, console-port shooters, and old favourites that just kept updating.
We tested seven of the best modern military shooter games for Android in 2026. Each was ranked on touch and controller controls, online matchmaking quality, cosmetic-only vs pay-to-win monetisation, and whether the gunplay feels closer to a tactical sim or an arcade run-and-gun.
What to look for in a modern military FPS on Android
The category is split between Counter-Strike clones (tight maps, round-based, modern weapons) and CoD-style arena shooters (deathmatch, kill streaks, loadout customisation). Both work, but the criteria are different.
- Hit registration. Mobile FPS lives or dies on this. Look for player reviews from the last six months, not the launch trailer.
- Server regions. A great game with 200 ms ping is no fun. Check the server list before committing.
- Anti-cheat. Aimbots have killed more than one Android FPS. Active anti-cheat (Riot Vanguard-equivalents are still rare on mobile) is a meaningful differentiator.
- Monetisation model. Cosmetic-only is the gold standard. Weapon stat purchases push players away within a season.
- Map design. Tactical maps reward map knowledge and angle-holding. Arena maps reward reflex. Pick the one you actually enjoy.
- Bluetooth controller support. Most modern shooters now ship with proper gamepad mapping. A few still treat it as second-class.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Multiplayer | Free to start | Controller support |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Critical Ops | Competitive CS-style | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Forward Assault | Round-based 5v5 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Standoff 2 | Esports CS feel | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Special Forces Group 2 | Local Wi-Fi and bots | Yes + offline | Yes | Yes |
| Bullet Force | CoD-style arena | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Modern Strike Online | Tactical arena with single player | Yes + offline | Yes | Partial |
| Call of Duty: Mobile | Closest to CoD console feel | Yes | Yes | Yes |
The 7 best modern military shooter games for Android in 2026
1. Critical Ops — best competitive CS-style shooter
Critical Ops is the longest-running serious Counter-Strike clone on Android. Five-on-five rounds, defuse and search-and-destroy modes, recoil patterns to learn, and an active competitive scene with monthly tournaments. The game is in its eighth year and still receives content updates, with weapon balance changes posted publicly each season.
Where it falls short: Cosmetic crates are the main monetisation, which is fine, but a few skins are gated behind tournament watch-events. Matchmaking outside peak hours pulls in higher-ping lobbies.
Pricing:
- Free to play with cosmetic purchases. Battle pass each season.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Critical Ops is the obvious first install if you like the round-based CS loop.
2. Forward Assault — best polished 5v5 with a single-player mode
Forward Assault sits between Critical Ops and CoD. Five-on-five competitive rounds with a defuse mode, plus a casual deathmatch, plus a single-player Operations chapter that teaches the maps. The map pool is smaller than Critical Ops but the gunplay is tight and the kill-cams are clear.
Where it falls short: Smaller player base than Critical Ops in some regions, which means longer matchmaking off-peak.
Pricing:
- Free to play with cosmetic skins. Battle pass.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Forward Assault is the right pick if you want the CS loop with a single-player runway to learn the maps.
3. Standoff 2 — best for esports-tier tactical play
Standoff 2 is the most CS-like shooter on Android, full stop. Bomb-defuse rounds, a competitive ranking ladder, the same weapon archetypes (AK, M4, AWP), skin trading, and an esports scene with sponsored teams. The gunplay favours map knowledge and angle-holding over reflex; spray control matters.
Where it falls short: Skin economy can feel pay-to-flex, and a small percentage of skins offer subtle visibility advantages. Anti-cheat improved in 2025 but is still imperfect.
Pricing:
- Free to play. Cosmetic-only purchases and a battle pass.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick Standoff 2 if you want the closest thing to mobile CS:GO that still has a populated competitive ladder.
4. Special Forces Group 2 — best for couch and local play
Special Forces Group 2 is the no-account, no-internet shooter every house with two phones needs. It plays online, over local Wi-Fi, or fully offline against bots, supports zombie and deathmatch modes alongside bomb defuse, and lets you skin every weapon for free. There is no battle pass, no crates, no daily quest pressure.
Where it falls short: Graphics are a generation behind the others on this list. Online matchmaking is uneven in some regions.
Pricing:
- Free with ads. One-time purchase removes ads and unlocks all maps.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Buy the ad-free unlock of Special Forces Group 2 if you want a shooter you can play offline or pass between phones in the same room.
5. Bullet Force — best CoD-style arena with custom rooms
Bullet Force is closer to Call of Duty than to Counter-Strike. Loadout customisation, perks, attachments, multiple game modes (Team Deathmatch, Conquest, Free For All, Gun Game), and the ability to host your own private rooms with custom rules. The single-player campaign is short but does its job as a tutorial.
Where it falls short: Some skins give a slight visibility edge in dark maps, and rare weapon unlocks lean on the cash shop or grinding hundreds of matches.
Pricing:
- Free to play with optional unlocks. No mandatory battle pass.
Platforms: Android, iOS, web.
Bottom line: Bullet Force is the choice for CoD-arena fans who want custom rooms with friends.
6. Modern Strike Online — best tactical arena with bot fallback
Modern Strike Online mixes a CS-style tactical mode with Battlefield-style large-map deathmatches. There is a single-player chapter, a sniper mode, and offline play against bots that earn you real loadout XP. Weapons unlock by rank, not by paying.
Where it falls short: The cash shop runs aggressive sales and the in-game ads after a match are frequent.
Pricing:
- Free to play with cosmetic and convenience purchases.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Modern Strike Online is the right pick if you want one shooter with a tactical lane, an arena lane, and an offline lane.
7. Call of Duty: Mobile — the closest to CoD console feel
Call of Duty: Mobile is the official Activision shooter and it carries the franchise loop intact: scorestreaks, classic maps (Nuketown, Crash, Crossfire), a battle royale mode on a real big map, and a ranked season ladder. Modern Warfare 4 is releasing on console, but CoD Mobile remains the closest you can get to that experience on a phone.
Where it falls short: Battle pass-driven cosmetics push hard. New weapon balance can lean on grinding the latest weapon to stay competitive.
Pricing:
- Free to play. Battle pass each season and cosmetic crates.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Install Call of Duty: Mobile if you want the franchise’s signature game modes and you can ride the battle pass treadmill.
How to pick the right one
- If you want the most serious competitive CS feel: Standoff 2 or Critical Ops.
- If you want the same loop with a smaller learning curve: Forward Assault.
- If your friends are in the same room and you want offline play: Special Forces Group 2.
- If you want CoD-style arena with custom rooms: Bullet Force.
- If you want all three modes in one app: Modern Strike Online.
- If the actual Call of Duty brand matters: Call of Duty: Mobile.
FAQ
Will Modern Warfare 4 come to Android? No port has been announced. Call of Duty: Mobile is the only official Activision shooter on Android and it shares some content with the console line at a delay.
What is the closest game to CS:GO on Android? Standoff 2 is the most CS-like in 2026: bomb-defuse rounds, similar weapon archetypes, skin trading, and an active competitive ladder. Critical Ops is the runner-up.
Are these games pay-to-win? Critical Ops, Forward Assault and Special Forces Group 2 are essentially cosmetic-only. Standoff 2 has a slight skin-visibility edge in some lobbies. Bullet Force and Modern Strike Online have stronger cash-shop pressure. Call of Duty: Mobile leans on battle pass weapons.
Do these support Bluetooth controllers? All seven map standard gamepads. Critical Ops, Forward Assault, Standoff 2, Special Forces Group 2, Bullet Force and Call of Duty: Mobile have native controller settings. Modern Strike Online has partial controller support.
What is the best shooter for offline play? Special Forces Group 2 has the most complete offline mode (bot deathmatch, zombie survival, custom maps). Modern Strike Online and Bullet Force include offline campaigns or training modes but the multiplayer is the real game.