Social Networking

Feb 19, 2014

A Game of Birds and Pipes

As the advent of the smartphone gadget reaches its peak, so has the number of touchscreen games that keeps people’s eyes glued on their touchscreens. There are some smartphone-users who play for fun and there are those, too, who turn fun into extreme—extreme rage, that is. With teeth gnashing, matched by colourful swearwords enough to fill a dictionary; fingers continuously tapping the screen for hours, paired with eyes full of the determination to win; veins popping as brows become knitted together in frustration at another defeat; and dark under eyes showing up after another sleepless night of game play, people have gone crazy over a new bird game: Flappy Bird. It’s a game that has gone viral on millions of people, and the infection just keeps getting worse.

Created in May 2013 by Dong Nguyen, an indie game developer based in Vietnam, Flappy Bird currently tops the ‘Most Popular’ chart in both iOS App Store and Google Play Store. It earns a whopping $50,000 a day, according to Forbes, and much to the surprise of the developer himself who created the game in just a span of three days. The game is also the current buzz of the social networking society with the infamous #flappybird or #flappybirdhighscore. Even local celebrities like Anne Curtis and Jerric Teng are hooked on Flappy Bird according to ABS-CBN News. The continuous tweets, statuses and photos of social networkers and media serve to continually put Flappy Bird in the limelight since the start of 2014.

Simple, yet terribly addicting, Flappy Bird is a game wherein the player navigates an adorably cute bird through a small gap between never-ending streams of pipes. Each pass through a pipe grants the player a point. The player is then rewarded with a medal for his first ten points. It sounds easy, right? Start with your first game, tap the screen to make the bird fly, hit a pipe, and you end with a score of zero. Play again and still you get a zero. Play the third time? The addiction starts. It’s a game reminiscent of the green pipes in Super Mario, the colourful birds in Angry Birds, and the graphics and sound effects of a 90s video game, yet a game that leaves you tapping for hours, nonetheless.

Despite the stress-inducing game play of Flappy Bird, every game has a trick of its own. While many game strategists argue that Flappy Bird is unrealistic due to the rate the bird falls upon collision with the pipe which, in short, means the game defies gravity; in research, the game actually follows another rule of physics based on an analysis by Frank Noschese, a Physics and Chemistry High School teacher in New York. According to him, what really affects the game is the impulse provided by a player’s tap on the screen. The ‘pre-tap velocity’ and ‘post-tap velocity’ is supposed to be constant or same, but in Flappy Bird, it isn’t; therefore, a light tap on the screen will send the bird flying higher than its supposed flight. It’s, thus, a trick of timing and reflexes.  

“Tap to flap your wings and fly. Avoid pipes. Try to earn medals,” a game with such simple instructions, yet one that will literally blow your mind off to the pit of Tartarus. You’re not from this century if you’ve never or won’t ever try Flappy Bird. Students, the business circle, celebrities, media men and even scientists are addicted to Flappy Bird. Anytime soon, it would be no wonder if even President Aquino himself becomes secretly hooked on the game. 


With this, I call quits!

Now that I'm officially over Flappy Bird, it's Iron Pants up next. ;)


Yours,

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