Tunnel Ball

5 plays

Controls

Left/Right Arrows or A/D: Steer left and right
Ball auto-rolls forward through the tunnel

How to Play Tunnel Ball

Steer left and right with arrow keys or A/D. The ball auto-rolls forward through the tunnel.

Dodge obstacles by switching lanes. Walls, barriers, and gaps approach and you have a window to read and react.

Choose branches at forks. Some forks are safe on both sides; others hide dead ends requiring instant commitment.

Survive as speed escalates. The longer you run, the faster obstacles arrive, so composure in the early game preserves reaction for later.

Tips & Strategies

Look ahead, not at your ball. Your position is peripheral; the approaching obstacles are what demand attention.

Stay centered when safe. Center position minimizes travel distance to dodge either direction, which matters as speed climbs.

Don't overcorrect. Sharp unnecessary lane changes into walls kill more runs than obstacles you failed to dodge.

Memorize repeating patterns. The same obstacle configurations recur - recognizing them lets you pre-position instead of reacting.

Tunnel Ball Features

Endless tunnel runner with continuous speed escalation
Curved, sloping tunnel requiring momentum-aware steering
Forking paths with branch commitment
Distance-based scoring and personal-best chasing
Fluid visual style fitting the ocean site theme

About Tunnel Ball

Tunnel Ball on Fish It Game is an endless tunnel runner where a ball auto-rolls forward through a curved, forking passageway and you steer left and right to dodge obstacles and pick safe branches. The tunnel isn't straight - it curves and slopes, so your steering has to account for momentum, not just lateral position.

Speed escalates continuously. The first minute is readable; by minute two the obstacles arrive fast enough that reaction alone isn't enough and you need to recognize patterns to pre-position. Walls with gaps, barriers forcing lane switches, and forks where you commit to a branch blind all repeat, and learning them extends your run.

The ocean site theme doesn't change the gameplay, but the tunnel aesthetic here leans into a fluid, flowing visual style that fits. The core loop - dodge, branch, survive - is identical to other Tunnel Ball builds.

Distance is the score, and beating your personal best is the hook. Runs always end eventually because speed keeps climbing, so the question is how long you sustain focus before a single lapse ends it.