Third-Party Game Portal Concept
Crazy Games appears to be a lightweight game-portal style package rather than a single standalone game. The idea is to provide an entry point where users can reach casual game content or web-based game pages from an Android wrapper.
That concept can be convenient when it behaves transparently: open the portal, choose a game, and play without installing every title separately. In this package, however, launch behavior makes trust review especially important before any extended use or data entry.
External Web Flow
The captured launch path opened a Chrome Custom Tab at an external domain and displayed an ad-style survey page with a countdown. That behavior is important because it moves the user outside the ordinary app screen and into web content before normal browsing feels clear or trustworthy.
Users should be cautious with any prompt that asks for survey answers, personal details, downloads, notifications, or account information. A game portal should not require risky web interactions before basic browsing feels trustworthy.
Permissions and Identity Checks
The package declares camera, microphone, location, and advertising ID permissions. Those permissions are notable for a casual game portal, especially when the recorded flow already includes external web content and ad-style pages.
Before keeping the app, users should compare package name, developer context, and hashes, then decide whether the permission set and redirect behavior match what they expect from a simple game launcher. Conservative permission choices, limited interaction, prompt avoidance, and careful web review are recommended for this package.