Alternatives

Face Raiders alternative on mobile — Pictonico is the official 2026 answer

Face Raiders has been gone since the 3DS eShop closed on March 27, 2023, and Nintendo never ported it. Pictonico! (May 28, 2026, iOS and Android) is the first official Nintendo photo-driven minigame title built for phones. Here is why it is the right Face Raiders replacement and what the alternatives look like.

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Pictonico is the only first-party answer in 2026. It does not replicate the 3DS AR rail shooter — nothing on phones really does — but it is the only officially supported Nintendo game on iOS or Android where the entire design hinges on photos of people from your camera roll. If you came here from a 3DS nostalgia thread, install the free demo on May 28 and decide from there.

Looking for a Face Raiders alternative on mobile? Start here

If you searched this, you probably already know the situation: Face Raiders shipped pre-installed on every Nintendo 3DS in 2011, you played it at least once, and now your 3DS is in a drawer and there is no way to put the game on a new system. The 3DS eShop closed on March 27, 2023, and Nintendo has not re-released Face Raiders on Switch, Switch 2, Nintendo Switch Online, or any mobile platform.

The shortest possible answer in 2026: Pictonico!, launching May 28, 2026 on iOS and Android, is the first official Nintendo game on phones built around the same core idea — pull faces and people out of photos and put them into gameplay. It does not replicate the 3DS AR rail shooter, but it is the closest first-party successor that currently exists.

There is no Face Raiders port. Pictonico is the official Nintendo + Intelligent Systems mobile alternative and the first photo-driven Nintendo game on phones.

Why Face Raiders is effectively gone in 2026

Face Raiders launched March 27, 2011 as a pre-installed pack-in on every 3DS. It was never sold separately, never moved to the eShop as a standalone download, and never ported to a non-3DS device. When the 3DS eShop closed on its own birthday — March 27, 2023, exactly twelve years to the day — the game became uninstallable on any new system.

Today the only way to play it is on a 3DS or 3DS XL that already has it installed. No emulator handles the gyroscope + outer-camera combo cleanly, and Nintendo has shown no signs of reviving it for Switch Online or Switch 2. For all practical purposes Face Raiders is a closed chapter.

Meet Pictonico: Nintendo's official mobile successor

Pictonico! is co-developed by Nintendo and Intelligent Systems — the studio behind WarioWare and, notably, the closely related WarioWare: Snapped! photo-microgame experiment. It launches May 28, 2026 on iOS and Android as a free-to-start download with 80 photo-based minigames split across two paid volumes.

The hook: Pictonico reaches into your phone's photo library, extracts people and objects from images you already have, and drops them into short minigames. Your photo of your sister becomes the character. Your dog photo becomes the obstacle. Nintendo states photos are not sent to its servers — all processing happens on-device.

How Pictonico recreates the Face Raiders feeling

The Face Raiders moment people actually remember is not the rail-shooter mechanic — it is the second when a face you recognize appears in a Nintendo-made game on a Nintendo device, doing something absurd. Pictonico delivers that exact moment, just from a library photo instead of a live capture, and across 80 different short scenarios instead of one repeated enemy loop.

What does not carry over: there is no 360-degree AR rotation, no physical aiming, no gyroscope shooting. Pictonico is a touch-based minigame collection. If the AR shooter mechanic was the reason you loved Face Raiders, no mobile game currently replicates that. If the photo-recognition delight was the reason, Pictonico is built specifically around it.

Side-by-side: Pictonico vs Face Raiders at a glance

Dimension Pictonico Face Raiders
Platform today iOS + Android, available May 28, 2026 3DS only; not on mobile, Switch, or Switch 2
Can you still install it? Yes — App Store and Google Play No — 3DS eShop closed March 27, 2023
Photo input Existing photos from phone library Live 3DS camera capture of a face
Genre Photo-driven minigame collection Gyroscope AR rail shooter
Content 80 minigames across two volumes 12 stages + boss progression
Price Free-to-start; $13.98 for full set Free pack-in (when 3DS was sold new)

What is different (and arguably better) on phone

Three things genuinely improve on phone. First, the photo source is the camera roll you already curate, so the game pulls from the best photos of the people you care about rather than whatever the front-facing camera grabs in bad lighting. Second, on-device processing means Nintendo never sees your images — a stronger privacy posture than Face Raiders even needed to articulate in 2011. Third, you can play sitting anywhere, with no need to physically rotate.

What is worse: there is no AR. No 360-degree shooting, no body movement, no gyroscope aim. If you were specifically hoping for a mobile version of the AR rail-shooter mechanic, Pictonico is not that and you should know going in.

Other photo-minigame games worth knowing

Honest list of adjacencies. Most of these are legacy Nintendo titles you cannot install today; Pictonico is currently the only officially supported active option:

Pictonico is not out yet at the time of writing. If Nintendo re-releases Face Raiders on Switch Online or a future console, the 'no port exists' framing will need updating.

  • WarioWare: Snapped! (DSiWare, 2009) — the closest direct ancestor and another Intelligent Systems photo-microgame experiment. Delisted with the DSi Shop closure on March 31, 2017.
  • Photo Dojo (DSiWare, 2010) — Nintendo's photo-based fighting game curio. Also delisted; no port exists.
  • Game Boy Camera (1998) — the original Nintendo photo-as-gameplay device. Hardware only; no current re-release.
  • AR Games (3DS pack-in, 2011) — sibling tech demo using AR cards rather than photo capture. Same eShop closure problem.
  • Hyper-casual mobile minigame packs — mechanically WarioWare-adjacent but ad-heavy and not built around photos.

Pricing, platforms, and how to get Pictonico

Pictonico! launches May 28, 2026 on iOS via the App Store and Android via Google Play. The download is free and includes a small set of starter minigames so you can decide whether the photo-prompt format clicks before paying anything. The full 80-minigame library unlocks via two in-app purchases.

If you are coming from a Face Raiders nostalgia search, start with the free demo. The minigames in the demo are the real product, just fewer of them — they are enough to tell whether 'photo of someone I know shows up in a Nintendo minigame' still hits the same way it did on the 3DS.

Pictonico free demo $0 Included with the free download
Pictonico Volume 1 $7.99 USD Per App Store IAP listing
Pictonico Volume 2 $5.99 USD Per App Store IAP listing
Full 80-minigame unlock $13.98 USD Volume 1 + Volume 2, before tax

FAQ

Is there a Face Raiders for iPhone or Android?

There is no official Face Raiders port on mobile. The closest first-party successor is Pictonico (May 28, 2026), a Nintendo + Intelligent Systems game that turns photos from your phone library into minigames.

Can I still download Face Raiders?

Only if you already have a 3DS with it installed. The 3DS eShop closed on March 27, 2023, so it cannot be downloaded on a fresh system.

Is Pictonico the same kind of game as Face Raiders?

Same DNA, different format. Face Raiders is a live-camera AR rail shooter. Pictonico is a touch-based minigame collection that pulls people and objects out of existing photos.

How much does Pictonico cost?

It is free to start. Volume 1 is $7.99 and Volume 2 is $5.99 — $13.98 for the full 80-minigame set.

Are there other photo-based mobile games like Face Raiders?

Few official ones. Pictonico is currently the most direct successor; older relatives like WarioWare: Snapped! and Photo Dojo are stuck on legacy Nintendo hardware with no mobile ports.

Does Pictonico use my camera live like Face Raiders did?

No. Pictonico reads photos already saved in your phone library rather than capturing live through the camera. Nintendo states images are processed on-device and not sent to its servers.