Related News
Killing Flappy Bird that laid the golden egg
The Vietnamese developer behind smash-hit free game Flappy Bird has pulled his creation from online stores after announcing that its runaway success had ruined his “simple life.”
Technology experts say the addictive and notoriously difficult game rose from obscurity at its release last May to become one of the most downloaded free mobile games on Apple’s App Store and Google’s Play store.
“Flappy Bird is a success of mine. But it also ruins my simple life. So now I hate it,” the game’s creator Nguyen Ha Dong tweeted.
“I am sorry Flappy Bird users, 22 hours from now, I will take Flappy Bird down. I cannot take this anymore,” he wrote on Saturday in a message that had been retweeted nearly 140,000 times by yesterday afternoon.
Flappy Bird was not available on the US or UK Apple app stores yesterday.
“It is not related to legal issues. I just cannot keep it anymore,” Dong tweeted from his @dongatory handle — which has seen its follower count grow by tens of thousands in recent days.
Flappy Bird features 2D retro-style graphics. The aim of the game is to direct a flying bird between oncoming sets of pipes without touching them.
Dong has said in interviews that his brainchild was pulling in as much as US$50,000 a day in revenue from online advertising banners.
The free game has been the number one app in Apple’s iOS App Store in more than 100 countries, according to An Minh Do, editor at the Tech in Asia online media company.
Withdrawing the game “may be a PR stunt or may be due to legal pressure or maybe he’s sick of the press. That is not clear yet,” Do said.
Some Vietnamese online commentators have speculated that Dong took down the game after coming under pressure from Japan’s Nintendo — Flappy Bird’s simple graphics appear to owe some debt to Nintendo’s early Mario Bros games.
But yesterday a Nintendo spokesman said: “Our company has not taken any action this time.”
Local online newspaper VNExpress quoted Dong — who also has two other games in the top 10 in online stores — as saying he created the game in a matter of days following “a weird design style.”
After revealing the revenues Flappy Bird was bringing in, Dong has been subject to abuse on Vietnamese online forums, leading some observers to speculate that this prompted him to withdraw the game.
“The whiff of money created a storm of jealousy, dragging down a shining new talent,” Quan The Dan wrote in an op-ed in VNExpress.
Supporting Dong would “help Vietnam start to shine on the world technology map” and it was a shame that parts of the Vietnamese online community turned on him instead, he wrote.
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 娌狪CP璇侊細娌狪CP澶05050403鍙-1
- |
- 浜掕仈缃戞柊闂讳俊鎭湇鍔¤鍙瘉锛31120180004
- |
- 缃戠粶瑙嗗惉璁稿彲璇侊細0909346
- |
- 骞挎挱鐢佃鑺傜洰鍒朵綔璁稿彲璇侊細娌瓧绗354鍙
- |
- 澧炲肩數淇′笟鍔$粡钀ヨ鍙瘉锛氭勃B2-20120012
Copyright 漏 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.