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Meet Wing Up, a game that takes cues from Flappy Bird and Nintendo
There have been hundreds of Flappy Bird clones out there ever since the simple game topped the charts across the world.
Although there’s been some innovation on the original concept from Dong Nguyen’s dotGEARS with games like Mr. Flap or Freaking Math, most games have stuck to the original “creature goes through pipes” gameplay. And after the craze of 2048, some devs have even attempted to combine the two smash hits.
But new games are still coming out of Vietnam. Games like School Cheater, 1Path, Chien Binh, Sky Garden, and more indicate that Vietnam has a vibrant gaming community.
Vietnam’s capital Hanoi is home to Dong Nguyen, and it’s where many strong Vietnamese mobile gaming studios take up residence. Only a few degrees of separation exist between some of the founders of these games and the Flappy Bird creator. And now we come to Wing Up, an iOS and Android game that takes inspiration from Flappy Bird and Nintendo.
Wing Up hails from an unknown developer named Tung Hoang, based out of Hanoi.
The core principles behind Flappy Bird that made their way into Wing Up
Wing Up basically uses the same key principles of mobile gaming that Flappy Bird employs.
Many of the more simple one-off mobile games we see today follow in these footsteps, so it’s worth noting them here briefly:
- Simple game play that just requires one tap for action: This, unlike other more complex games like Horn, Oceanhorn, Bastion, etc. make the barrier to entry for new gamers very low.
- One level: This makes it so that the game is boiled down to the most basic action, can you do it or not? It also makes it easy to pass your mobile to someone else so they can play it too.
- Very easy to replay: One of the key things dotGEARS did was make it so easy to restart Flappy Bird. Although it was frustrating when the bird died, restarting was instant. This also made it easy to spend hours on a game that took less than a minute to play.
- Simplified retro graphics: Flappy Bird is certainly not a pioneer of retro games on mobile. Long before Flappy Bird hit the scene, many mobile games used old-school graphics. This is a motif that all the clones and admirers have taken on.
- Mobile ads: Especially for Vietnamese developers, one of the biggest lessons from the success of Flappy Bird is that there is some serious money to be made on mobile ads. After all, Dong Nguyen was reporting making over US$50 000 a day from Flappy Bird.
Each of these principles can be found on Wing Up, which put its own spin on a bird flying through space. Wing Up brings two taps to the Flappy Bird world Instead of flying horizontally, the Wing Up bird flies upwards through the sky, much like other vertical platformers.
In addition to pipes, the bird has to swerve around blocks as well. The game isn’t much harder than Flappy Bird. Arguably, it’s easier. The biggest difference between Flappy Bird and Wing Up is that Wing Up requires both thumbs to play because the bird must flap left and right to traverse the blocks.
As you can see in the picture, the blocks resemble the bricks that Mario had to traverse in Nintendo’s flagship games.
Where Flappy Bird took artistic liberties from the green pipes, Wing Up takes them from the brown blocks.
But at its core, both these games are quite different. Wing Up just employs some of the core principles that Flappy Bird made popular and gives us a new take on birds flying through space.
Give the game a few taps on iOS here and on Android here.
This article by Anh-Minh Do originally appeared on Tech in Asia, a Burn Media publishing partner.