"Arcanoid: Ball of Destiny" is as WR says ported from Android. The idea & the way that this sort of thing works, is that the developer codes the game or app using software that can compile the app or game for more than one platform or OS. So the dev codes the game [or app] once, & the software spits out versions for Android & Windows for example. The main problems with this approach are that you can't have stuff that's too complicated for Android to handle, and it's more difficult to scale the display so it looks just as good on a PC as it does a cell phone. The latter hopefully will be fixed in the future, now that Google is starting to let Chromebooks use Android apps & games.
An alternative is to use an Android emulator, which is basically software pretending to be a Android device, running an Android OS. Rather than trying to make an Android app or game run in Windows, & translate the touch screen controls to use mouse & keyboard, those aspects are handled, in some cases much better, by the emulator itself. Using an Android emulator can be as simple as running something like the Remix Player, which creates the virtual environment, then runs Android inside of it, or as complicated as installing a complete OS that you can boot to instead of Windows, or pretty much everywhere in between.
windowsreport[.]com/best-android-emulators-windows-10/
androidauthority[.]com/best-android-emulators-for-pc-655308/
IMPORTANT Note: Don't get any Android apps or games from anywhere besides the Google or Amazon stores, with the exception of those offered by your cellular carrier or maybe a company like Samsung if they made your device. Curious about "Arcanoid: Ball of Destiny", I found it had been removed from Google's Play Store. So I went to the game developer's site, which was soon blocked by McAfee. Proceeding anyway, it attempted to install a malware app designed to look like a copy of the Flash player.
The original game was most probably OK, since Google checks apps & games before they can appear in their store. The PC version offered is OK, since it's been checked by MPC & GOTD. But the game dev apparently later went over to the dark side, likely causing Google to pull a new version of the game containing malware. The Android version of "Arcanoid: Ball of Destiny" is still available from several sites for download -- whether you'd get the OK version or the malware is anyone's guess, so STICK with the Google & Amazon stores.
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One use for an Android Emulator is as a source for apps you can't install normally. Not all Android devices can easily access Google's Play Store, e.g. Kindles. Not all apps in the Play Store will install on any device -- not being listed as compatible may mean a real incompatibility, or a partial one, or that the developer simply hasn't tested it on that device.
You can use another device, if you have one, or use an emulator to download & install the app you want/need. Then I use AppWererabbit [there are other, similar apps] to export the APK [install file] for the app I want. I use Dropbox, but transfer that APK however you want to the target device, enable installation from untrusted sources if necessary in the settings, then install the app from that APK -- the process is called side loading -- then turn off permission to install from untrusted sources once you're done.