The official Crossy Road app has evolved—it now includes battle passes, limited-time events, and video ads for revives. While that supports the developers, some players miss the pure, frictionless arcade experience.

The GitLab.io version preserves that original spirit:

It’s just you, a pixel duck, and an infinite highway.

This is an important question. The GitLab.io version is a fan-made clone, not an official release by Hipster Whale. However, most such projects fall under "fair use" or "open-source parody" as long as:

Many GitLab forks include a disclaimer: “Crossy Road is a trademark of Hipster Whale. This project is not affiliated.” As long as it remains non-commercial, it generally stays online.

Let’s look under the hood of a typical Crossy Road clone hosted on GitLab.io. Most of these projects share a common architecture:

The search for Crossy Road GitLab io represents a larger trend: the return of the open web. Players are tired of walled gardens (App Store, Play Store) where ads interrupt gameplay every 30 seconds.

By hosting games on platforms like GitLab Pages, developers reclaim the original spirit of the internet: shareable, instant, free content. No permissions needed. No credit card required. Just a URL and a keyboard.

GitLab Pages is a free static site hosting service. Developers choose it for open-source game projects because:

For the Crossy Road fan project, GitLab.io provides the perfect home: reliable, simple, and community-driven.

While the original mobile game has microtransactions for new characters, the GitLab versions are gloriously raw and open-source. Here are three standout iterations I discovered while researching this post:

Ready to play? Do not download anything. Follow these steps:

  • Look for the link: The URL will look like username.gitlab.io/crossy-road or username.gitlab.io/games/crossy.
  • Play: Use the Arrow Keys (Up, Down, Left, Right) or WASD to move your character. Wait for the traffic light or gaps in the cars. Avoid the river logs!
  • Warning: Because these are user-uploaded files, ensure you trust the source. While GitLab scans for viruses, a malicious developer could theoretically host phishing pages. Stick to repositories with high star counts or active commit histories.