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Flappy Bird is a 2013 casual mobile game developed by Vietnamese video game artist and programmer Dong Nguyen (Vietnamese: Nguyễn Hà Đông), under his game development company .Gears. [1] The game is a side-scroller where the player controls a bird, Faby, attempting to fly between columns of green pipes without hitting them.
Flappy (フラッピー, Furappī) is a puzzle video game by dB-Soft in the same vein as the Eggerland series and Sokoban that is obscure outside Japan.It stars Flappy, a somewhat mole-like character who must complete each level by pushing a blue stone from its starting place to the blue tile destination.
Flappy Bird is a 2024 arcade mobile game developed by Gametech Holdings, under the name "The Flappy Bird Foundation". The game was announced on September 12, 2024 as an unofficial reboot of the original game. The company acquired the trademark in January 2024 in a lawsuit against the game's original developer. The game is hosted on a blockchain ...
Flappy Bird is returning in 2025 after being pulled from the App Store and Google Play by its developer for being too addictive for users.
DotGears Company Limited (trade name: .Gears) is a Vietnamese video game developer based in Hanoi that specialises in hypercasual mobile games.The company was founded in 2005 by Dong Nguyen, [2] [a] and is best known for developing the 2013 game Flappy Bird, which became popular due to its simple mechanics but high difficulty. [4]
The game's free-to-play model was based on the one for Dota 2. [10] A big influence on the team was the success of the game Flappy Bird. Developer Matt Hall noted that "That was when people really wanted to play high-score chasing games, and they were telling people about it, and there was this cool opportunity."
Many mobile games are distributed free to the end user, but carry paid advertising: examples are Flappy Bird and Doodle Jump. The latter follows the "freemium" model, in which the base game is free but additional items for the game can be purchased separately. Some of the most popular mobile game developers and publishers include Gameloft and King.
Microsoft Entertainment Pack, also known as Windows Entertainment Pack [2] or simply WEP, is a collection of 16-bit casual computer games for Windows. There were four Entertainment Packs released between 1990 and 1992. These games were somewhat unusual for the time, in that they would not run under MS-DOS.