neowin[.]net/news/clash-of-clans-and-clash-royale-can-finally-be-played-on-the-pc-via-google-play-games/
theverge[.]com/2023/10/23/23928877/google-play-games-pc-4k-game-controllers-clash-of-clans-royale
There are 3 ways you can play Android games on a Windows PC/laptop... One way is to use an emulator like BlueStacks, which works like virtual machine host software but for the Android OS. While in theory it could work for any and all Android apps & games, there's a large selection that the BlueStacks folks have set up & provide. bluestacks[.]com/
Microsoft has the Windows Subsystem for Android. It's arguably more efficient, being an actual Android installation within Windows, using stuff Windows already includes, rather than using code sitting on top of Windows to translate between the two OSes. It does require Win11 and an SSD, 16GB RAM is recommended, and Windows virtualization has to be turned on / installed [while it's possible to still run VirtualBox, it doesn't do too well in my experience]. It's biggest limitation however is that you can only use a selection of games [& a few apps] from the Amazon App Store. It is possible to side load apps & games from the Google Play store, and there are software tools to make that much easier, but very many will simply not work. If you're really dedicated, or desperate, you can Google to find ways to include the Google services used by some apps & games in their Play Store, and that can help, but it's not the easiest project to undertake.
The third way is to install Google's Play Games. The app is under active development, with new features and games being added somewhat regularly. And it may be the easiest of the 3 choices to set up and start playing. There are caveats... like anything from Google other than search, it could wind up being abandoned. And despite all of Google's know how, it will not work for everybody. It apparently doesn't like AMD hardware in particular -- I've tried a couple of times since its release and it will not run on my wife's AMD rig.