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From Flappy Bird clones to 2048, mobile web games are here to disrupt app stores

pando.com

14 points by austinhallock 12 years ago · 3 comments

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fidotron 12 years ago

But users != revenue.

The killer problem with mobile web games is monetisation. The app stores absolutely destroy any web based approach for this, hands down, and until that changes even things like the Chrome store will remain ghost towns.

This is really why there was a giant exodus of game developers from Facebook to mobile platforms in the first place.

  • cgarrigue 12 years ago

    That's the point the article is missing. Many people currently creating HTML5 games are not motivated by money. They can be hobbyists or people familiar with JS who wants to try making a game using a language they already know. As a consequence this lead to the apparition of many game engine/frameworks/libraries just like the last few years have seen an explosion of "generalist" JS frameworks/libraries. And this explains why the last few weeks we saw many flappy birds and 2048 clones. Well, and the Flappy Game Jam probably helped regarding the formers too.

    And as these types of games can be quite addictive, while using JS made them easy to share over Twitter or Facebook, no wonder they were so successful.

    For the moment there is nothing indicating that these two free successes could lead to the commercial success of paid web games. At least nothing so far that would make developers migrate from native apps.

izzydata 12 years ago

I laughed when I read the line implying that flappy bird and 2048 were high quality games.

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