Aim and shoot arrows across wind and moving targets. Addictive precision game. Play instantly in your browser â no download, no account required.
Aim and shoot arrows across wind and moving targets. Addictive precision game. This is a free browser game â it works on Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge without any installation. It also works on mobile browsers and Chromebooks.
Wind compensation is archery's most technical skill, requiring mental calculation of arrow flight time, crosswind speed, and trajectory adjustment â all before releasing. The browser version models this accurately enough that understanding real wind compensation principles directly improves your score.
Real archers calculate wind in terms of clock positions. A wind blowing from three o'clock (directly from the right) at full strength might push an arrow 4-6 centimeters at 18 meters, requiring equivalent aim compensation to the left. In the browser game, the wind indicator shows direction and intensity â developing intuition for how much aim offset each wind reading requires at each distance is the learnable skill that separates consistent from inconsistent players.
The world tour structure exposes you to different wind patterns at each location. Tokyo might have light variable winds. London's famous breezy conditions produce stronger crosswinds. Sydney's harbor creates gusting patterns that change direction mid-session. Each venue trains different wind adaptation skills â no single wind pattern preparation covers all tournament locations.
Draw length and power control interact with wind compensation. At longer distances, arrows spend more time in flight and experience more total wind drift. A compensation that works perfectly at 18 meters may undershoot or overshoot at 70 meters in the same wind conditions. Adjusting compensation based on distance as well as wind speed is the complete wind management skill.
Real-world Olympic archery competition records show that mental preparation and wind reading contribute more to score variance than raw physical bow-drawing ability at elite levels. The browser game captures this mental challenge accurately â success comes from thinking, not just aiming.
Olympic archery at world-class level involves wind reading as a real-time calculation skill. Coaches stand behind archers with wind flags to provide additional data. Players who internalize the relationship between wind indicator readings and required aim offset across different distances develop a mental model that makes tournament performance consistent rather than luck-dependent. The browser game trains exactly this calculation skill across its global tournament progression.