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Geometry Dash

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Geometry Dash
Geometry Dash Text
Developer(s)Robert Topala from RobTop Games
Publisher(s)RobTop Games
SeriesGeometry Dash Edit this on Wikidata
EngineCocos 2D-X (heavily modified Unity 4)
Platform(s)Windows, MacOS, Windows Mobile, Android, iOS
ReleaseAugust 13, 2013
Genre(s)Platformer Game
Mode(s)Multiplayer
single-player Edit this on Wikidata

Geometry Dash (also known as GD or GMD) is a rhythm-based sidescroller platformer game developed and published by RobTop Games. It started being sold for $2.00 USD on August 13, 2013 on the Google Play and App Store, and is a 2D platform game that involves dodging obstacles (spikes, walls, and creatures) in a series of levels. Players can create levels in the level editor, and play levels made by other players. There are many tools for creating levels: rings (commonly just called orbs) that let you jump mid air, pads that boost you up higher, and triggers that allow the level creator t

The player moves towards the right of the screen automatically in the game's classic mode, where the player has full control of their movement in platformer mode (released in the latest major update, 2.2).

There are gamemodes that the player can turn into: Ship, Ball, UFO, Wave, Robot, Spider, and Swing. All of these gamemodes have unique physics, and their own customizable icons.

There are also other types of portals. For example: upside-down portal, speed portals, the mirror portal and the miniature portal. There are 22 main levels that RobTop made to try and set the player up and online community made levels, also introducing what every update brings. In recent years, Geometry Dash has risen to the top due to popular faces of the community, such as Eli Onorato, a professional player of the game.

Geometry Dash is available on Steam, IOS and Android.

It is recommended to use the Geometry Dash Fandom wiki as it is maintained better than this article.

Gameplay

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The player can use the keyboard, touch screen, controller, mouse, etc. to control the icon.

Unlocking new icons requires collecting each of the games different currencies, and can be done by completing quests, Eli, and certain levels (daily, weekly, gauntlet) for diamonds, completing map packs and official levels for secret coins (or star rated levels for user coins) and star rated / official levels for stars (with platformer levels rewarding moons instead). Beating eli or progressing any star rated level also grant mana orbs (a feature introduced in update 2.1).

The Geometry Dash user-made levels range in difficulty from auto to demon (at its peak, extreme demon) with thousands of levels to explore. As of October 2025, there are over 1500 rated extreme demons in Geometry Dash. The easiest level in this category is Red World according. All extreme demons are ranked on the All-Rated Extreme Demon List also known as AREDL. The hardest 150 extreme demons that are rated are on the pointercrate demonlist, with the hardest being Thinking Space II. An upcoming top 1 known as Grief is currently in the works of being verified by Doggie. He has 83% on the level.

Some main levels (some not arranged):

Stereo Madness being the easiest. Back on Track is next. Dry out, Polargeist, Base after Base, Can’t Let Go, Jumper, Time Machine, Cycles, xStep, ClutterFunk, Theory of Everything, Electroman Adventures, Clubstep, Electrodynamix, Hexagon Force, Blast Processing, Theory of Everything 2, Geometrical Dominator, Deadlocked, Fingerdash, and Dash.

There are also four platformer mode levels:

The Tower, The Sewers, The Cellar, and The Secret Hollow.

References

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  1. "Levels | Geometry Dash". July 21, 2025.