Google Play has opened its first Indie Games Fund for Africa, putting $1 million behind independent studios across 32 countries on the continent.
The program, announced on 1 July 2026, is built around equity-free capital paired with technical support and mentorship, a combination Google says is designed to help African developers scale their games for a global audience rather than simply survive another funding cycle.
The fund is recognizing that Africa’s game development scene has never lacked creative talent or compelling stories to tell, but capital has been the persistent bottleneck.
Studios with strong concepts and working products have often stalled at the point where they need money to optimize, market, and distribute what they have built.
Google’s fund targets that exact gap rather than the earlier, harder problem of getting a studio off the ground.
Selected studios will share the $1 million pool in individual allocations of between $50,000 and $200,000, a range wide enough to support both smaller teams looking to polish a single title and larger studios chasing a multi-market launch.
Beyond the cash, recipients get hands-on mentorship from industry experts and direct technical guidance aimed at improving how their games perform and how discoverable they are on the Play Store.
The eligibility criteria narrow the field considerably. Applicants must be registered and based in one of the 32 qualifying countries, which include Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zimbabwe, among others.
Studios need to be privately held, independent, and capped at 50 employees, ruling out publicly listed companies and larger operations. Crucially, applicants must already have a launched title on mobile, PC, or console. This is not a fund for concepts or prototypes.
There’s also a commitment attached to selection. Studios that make the cut have to bring their game to Google Play if it isn’t already there and participate non-exclusively in the Play Pass subscription program for two years.
It’s a reasonable trade given the size of the grants, but it does mean the fund doubles as a distribution play for Google as much as a support mechanism for developers.
Applications are open now through the official program portal and close at 3PM EAT on 31 July 2026. Google plans to announce the ten selected studios in September, giving successful applicants roughly two months of review before funding decisions land.
For Kenyan studios weighing whether to apply, the bar is less about polish and more about having a real, shipped product and a clear plan for what the money would unlock.
Given how tightly African game studios have historically had to bootstrap, a grant in this range could meaningfully change what a small team is able to build next.



























