The FlappyBird game on an iPhone.Photo:Martin Keene/PA Images via Getty
Martin Keene/PA Images via Getty
Flappy Bird, the game that many were obsessed with a decade ago, may be coming back, but its original creator is not involved.
On Sept. 12, it was announced onX(formerly Twitter) that the beloved game was returning. “I AM BACK!!” read an update on the game’s official account.
“Just a decade ago, I was the talk of the town and soaring to new heights with my 100 million friends,” read the message. “Sadly, I had to leave the fame and spotlight behind to go home and find out who I really am.”
“Thanks to my super Flappy Bird® fans, I’m refreshed, reinvigorated, and ready to soar again,” the message continued. “The decade-long mission involved acquiring legal rights and even working with my predecessor to uncage me and re-hatch the official Flappy Bird® game!”
However, Flappy Bird creator Dong Nguyen hasdenied any involvement. “No, I have no [relation to] their game. I did not sell anything,” he wrote in a social media post on Sept. 15.
Flappy Bird on a smartphone.HOANG DINH NAM/AFP via Getty
HOANG DINH NAM/AFP via Getty
For those unfamiliar, Flappy Bird was released in 2013. The retro-themed game involved navigating a bird around columns, making sure it wouldn’t hit the obstructions.
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According toEngadget, the game made $50,000 a day in advertising when it reached unprecedented popularity in early 2014.
But that February, Nguyen announced that he had taken the game offline. “I am sorry ‘Flappy Bird’ users, 22 hours from now, I will take ‘Flappy Bird’ down,” he wrote in a Feb. 8 post onX. “I cannot take this anymore,” he added.
He toldForbesdays later that he wanted the game to be a relaxing activity, but it became “an addictive product.” “I think it has become a problem. To solve that problem, it’s best to take down Flappy Bird. It’s gone forever.”
The Flappy Bird Foundation then acquired the rights from Gametech Holdings. The group also filed in opposition of Nguyen’s trademark in 2023, perThe Verge.
While it’s unclear why Nguyen referred to in his statement cybersecurity researcherVarun Biniwalenoted that “some pages” on the Flappy Bird website suggest there might be a cryptocurrency element when the game launches, asThe Vergereported.
PEOPLE Magazine reached out to the game and Nguyen for additional comment.
source: people.com