Look Out, Candy Crush: Flappy Bird Is the Latest Craze in Mobile Gaming
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Just one glance at the iTunes and Google Play app charts makes it patently clear that mobile gamers have gone a little cuckoo over games about birds.
Following the unprecedented success of Angry Birds, a new winged character has taken flight: Flappy Bird.
Created by Dong Nguyen of dotGears, an indie game studio based in Vietnam, Flappy Bird is currently the No. 1 free app on both Apple and Android devices. To date, it has received nearly 500,000 four-star reviews in the iTunes store.
Related: The NSA Is Using Angry Birds to Spy on You
And that’s not all. Nguyen has two other games perched high atop the iTunes charts — likely resulting from enthusiastic word-of-mouth about Flappy Bird. These include Super Ball (#2) and Shuriken Block (#6).
Perhaps most bafflingly, Nguyen told the app development blog Chocolate Lap Apps that the growth of the games . “I didn’t use any promotion methods,” he said.
Flappy Bird has been described as infuriatingly difficult to win and is characterized by a rudimentary graphic display and extremely straightforward (read: nonexistent) storyline. Players must continually tap on their touchscreens in order to navigate a between green pipes — not unlike those traveled by Super Mario himself.
Related: Sweet Victory: Candy Crush Developer Trademarks the Word ‘Candy’
The game was initially uploaded in May, but has only recently captured public attention. It is a free program that features ads but offers none of the in-app purchases that have made games like Candy Crush Saga so immensely lucrative.
While piggybacking on buzzwords — like “birds” — has proven effective in an increasingly congested app market, it has also raised legal eyebrows. Candy Crush developer King even successfully filed a trademark claim on the word “candy,” while Zynga owns a trademark for the phrase “with friends,” originating from its massively successful Words With Friends app.
While Flappy Bird’s meteoric success is the kind that is simply , Nguyen himself seems the most shocked of all. “I don’t know how my games can be so popular,” he told TechCrunch. “Most of my players are kids in schools.”
Related: A Step-by-Step Guide To Building Your First Mobile App
Just one glance at the iTunes and Google Play app charts makes it patently clear that mobile gamers have gone a little cuckoo over games about birds.
Following the unprecedented success of Angry Birds, a new winged character has taken flight: Flappy Bird.
Created by Dong Nguyen of dotGears, an indie game studio based in Vietnam, Flappy Bird is currently the No. 1 free app on both Apple and Android devices. To date, it has received nearly 500,000 four-star reviews in the iTunes store.