Bullet Strike: Battlegrounds vs PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG)
Bullet Strike: Battlegrounds
Bullet Strike: Battlegrounds is a really promising battle royale game that you can play on your mobile devices. The game will feature everything you'd expect from a battle royale game including a massive yet gradually shrinking map to explore, tons of weapons and items to pick up, plenty of players to exchange bullets with (up to 20 players), as well as intense and strategic PvP where the last man standing will be crowned the victor royale. However, the game is striving to be unique by introducing character customization which many mobile battle royale games simply omit, along with a specially-crafted gameplay that is designed for competitive eSports.Despite still being in beta and having some bugs to fix, Bullet Strike: Battlegrounds seems like it's going to turn out to be a really fun battle royale game. Most players won't be able to play the game as of yet, but you can pre-register and maybe you'll be selected to become the game's next wave of beta-testers.
PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG)
PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG) is a battle royale game that features a vast open world island filled with plenty of resources to scavenge. Being a battle royale game, everyone will start off on an equal playing field. Through clever scavenging and picking the correct fights will you end up with the last few survivors to battle it out for the winning spot as the map will gradually shrink, pushing survivors closer and closer together.In some way, Player Unknown's Battlegrounds reminds me of Hunger Games, albeit a much more brutal Hunger Games that you can actually play in, and I'd actually like that.
However, the game is still pretty poorly optimized long after its release as an early access game, and well, the game has drawn plenty of flak since the devs have started banning anybody who killed a streamer who cries foul due to this thing called "Stream sniping", giving rise to a pretty bad and toxic atmosphere where streamers are players whom you literally can't kill in fear of being banned for no reason other than getting the upper hand on a streamer. Worst thing is the game's not exactly a free-to-play, so if you do get banned, that's literally money down the drain.
So, even if the game is as epic a battle royale game as it is, you should keep these downsides in mind going in. Gameplay-wise, the game is amazing, but you will need to be wary of its increasingly toxic community (both players and the team managing the PR side of the game).
Its developer, BlueHole, has recently (as of March 2018) released the mobile versions of the game, PUBG Mobile. The mobile version of PUBG is available on both Android and iOS.