A Pokémon-themed game which allows players to play as a Pokémon and choose new moves as they level up and evolve. Its matches last for a fixed amount of time.

Players collect tokens in the "jungle" area of the map, and can turn them in at five "scoring areas" along the lanes on the enemy's half of the map. The deeper scoring areas award extra points, while double points are awarded in the final minute. Victory is given to the team with the most points after a fixed time limit.

A leaner edition of League of Legends, targeting mobile and eventually consoles. It will make some changes to ensure best fit for these platforms and their controls, as well as speed up game times.

Japanese-themed mobile game, reportedly with good graphics for its platform.

Mobile game resembling League of Legends, with slightly simpler heroes and action controls. It's enormously popular in China, thanks to WeChat and QQ social integration making it easy to bring friends, and building its lore and narrative around Chinese history and mythology.

Outside China, a different version of the game is distributed with the name 'Arena of Valor'. It uses a separate cast of characters, including licensed IP like 'Wonder Woman'. Gameplay on the Nintendo Switch is different to mobile, and as a result it is not cross-platform compatible.

Third-party research agency Jiguang published a report in 2017 declaring that the game's audience was 54% female and 52% under age 24. This has been backed up in 2020 by a report from the Shanghai Online Games Association. A report in 2019 from Newzoo suggests 46% of the Honor of Kings esports audience is female. This is comfortably the most inclusive lane-pushing game on the market, though its success appears constrained to the Chinese market.

Due to its two boss objectives and carefully tuned economy, it has a stable meta with fixed lane positions for each hero role.