AI-powered game development has recently been blamed for flooding app stores with low-effort mobile games, but every now and then, the technology produces a far more interesting result. Google lead product and design executive Ammar Reshi says he used Fable 5 to port Command & Conquer Generals Zero Hour to the iPhone and iPad.
This is not an emulator or a cloud-streamed version. According to Reshi’s GitHub page, the actual 2003 game engine has been compiled natively for ARM64 and runs on iPhone, iPad, and Mac. The project uses EA’s GPL source release and builds on existing community work, while adding the iOS and iPadOS port.
How Claude helped move a PC classic to iPhone
The port was not as simple as making an old Windows game run on a new screen. The original engine expected a writable PC-style file system, while iOS apps live inside a locked-down, code-signed bundle. Save files, cache paths, and configuration writes had to be redirected.
The graphics pipeline also needed serious work. Zero Hour was built around DirectX 8, while Apple devices use Metal. The project routes that through DXVK and MoltenVK, translating the old DirectX renderer through Vulkan and then to Metal.
An RTS also needs a mouse, which the iPhone obviously does not have. Reshi’s port adds touch controls built around strategy gameplay, including tap selection, drag-box selection, two-finger scrolling, pinch zoom, and long-press actions.
A better use for AI in gaming
Command & Conquer Generals Zero Hour was one of the great PC RTS games of its era. It was fast, chaotic, and made its Generals Challenge mode feel like a proper test of strategy.
For anyone who grew up playing RTS games on PC, this is the kind of AI project that actually feels worthwhile. Gamers have generally had a negative view of AI in games, especially when it is used to replace human creativity or flood app stores with forgettable titles. Here, it helped bring a classic to devices it was never meant to run on.
Reshi’s port still depends on EA’s source release and years of community modernization work, which he has credited. But seeing Zero Hour run natively on an iPhone is still a wild outcome.


