Installation is fairly straight forward in both programs. Both programs offer gamepad support, but the ability to use your phone as a controller does give Andyroid a slight head start coming out of the features gate.
There is also a noticeable pro in Andyroid’s favor in the ability to use your phone as a remote controller for the action on the PC side. Andyroid does show “featured” apps to you, but they are never automatically downloaded. This comes off a little iffy to me personally, but they do have to pay the bills and I have been able to back out of these downloads easily enough. The one noticeable con goes into the BlueStacks column right away, though, as part of their free product involves downloading “featured” apps as a way to pay their bills. Whether BlueStacks or Andyroid is better for you will largely depend on your personal user experience and features that you may want. While both offer more enterprise/developer focused paid subscription models, each offers a full fledged version of the program free of charge for your enjoyment. Thankfully you will not be needing to shell out precious bottlecaps to use either of these programs. I’ll go a little into each program and some of the pros and cons for these two applications and give you a bit of video of Fallout Shelter in action on Windows! Android Authority has a more information on the differences between the two here. Fallout Shelter was released today for Android OS (Finally!), and with it comes the ability to play this title on your PC!While Fallout Shelter is out - natively - for iOS and Android, you now have the ability to play it on your desktop or laptop via Android on solutions for PC like Andyroid or BlueStacks. Heyo Nerdites! I wanted to stop in with a quicker hit to drop a little bit of knowledge for those who may not be in the know. With Fallout Shelter recently released for Android, Josh shows you how you can now Play Fallout Shelter on Windows and Mac!