Tencent's Honor of Kings: World officially launched on iOS and Android on April 17, one week after its PC debut, and it arrived with a statement: this is not a stripped-down mobile port. Every piece of content available on PC — all 11 launch Resonances, the full main story arc through the Jixia Interlude, four-player co-op bosses, PvP modes, housing, crafting, and cooking — shipped on mobile from day one, with full cross-platform progression between PC and mobile through a shared server environment.
For a game that demands approximately 32GB of storage on your phone, with Tencent recommending 40GB of free space, that completeness is not just a selling point. It is a requirement to justify the footprint. And based on early reception in China, where Honor of Kings: World has been positioned as the biggest MMORPG launch of 2026, the bet appears to be paying off.
A Console-Quality RPG on Your Phone
Honor of Kings: World is an open-world action RPG developed by TiMi Studio Group, a subsidiary of Tencent Games, and published under the Level Infinite label. The game is set in a fantasy world inspired by Chinese mythology and martial arts traditions, drawing heavily from the lore and characters of Honor of Kings — the MOBA that is one of the highest-grossing mobile games in history with over 100 million daily active players.
But unlike its MOBA parent, Honor of Kings: World is a fully realized open-world experience. Players explore vast landscapes, engage in real-time action combat with combo systems and dodge mechanics, take on world bosses with up to three other players, and progress through a narrative campaign that blends political intrigue with supernatural conflict. The combat system emphasizes skill-based play with each Resonance — the game's term for playable characters — offering distinct movesets, weapon types, and elemental abilities.
The visual fidelity on mobile is genuinely impressive. TiMi has pushed mobile hardware hard, with detailed character models, dynamic lighting, and environmental effects that rival mid-tier console games. The trade-off is that storage requirement — 32GB is significant on a phone — but for players willing to make the space, the result is one of the most technically ambitious mobile RPGs ever released.
Cross-Platform Progression That Actually Works
The standout feature of the mobile launch is seamless cross-platform play. A player who started the prologue on PC when the game launched on April 10 can pick up the exact same save on their phone without losing a single piece of progress. Characters, gear, story advancement, housing decorations, crafted items — everything syncs through the shared server infrastructure. There is no separate mobile server, no re-rolling, and no grinding the same content twice.
Any single account can be used to log in on PC, iOS, or Android, and all progress is persisted on the server side. This is the kind of cross-platform implementation that games like Genshin Impact popularized, and Honor of Kings: World executes it cleanly. For mobile players in particular, the ability to do daily activities or manage crafting on the go while saving major story content and co-op boss fights for PC sessions makes the dual-platform experience genuinely complementary rather than redundant.
Currently China-Only, But the Global Launch is Coming
There is one significant caveat: Honor of Kings: World is currently available only in mainland China. The global launch has not been officially dated, though Level Infinite has begun accepting PC alpha test signups for western markets and the game's official international website is live. Given the scale of investment and Tencent's global publishing infrastructure, an international release is widely expected within the next six to twelve months.
For now, the mobile launch in China represents a proof of concept for what a no-compromise mobile RPG looks like in 2026. The 32GB install size, the full content parity with PC, the seamless cross-platform saves — these are not the hallmarks of a game that treats mobile as an afterthought. Whether Honor of Kings: World can replicate this ambition on a global scale remains to be seen, but the mobile launch has set a benchmark that other developers in the space will be measuring themselves against for years to come.
