A las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime.
Quien no juega sin parar, es porque no quiere. Y es que a las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime: desde plataformas locos hasta puzzles, clásicos y rol. Coge tu mando: ¡Literalmente no pierdes nada si el juego no te gusta!
Faraway: Arctic Escape
Relájate… Si puedes. La secuela de Faraway llega con puzzles de esos que te revientan la cabeza a base de pensar, lugares increíbles que explorar y situaciones que harán que te acerques poco a poco a tu padre perdido. Eso sí, prepárate para darle vueltas a todo (literalmente) en uno de los mejores juegos de romperte el coco de los últimos años.
Baldur’s Gate: Edición Mejorada
Nacido de las páginas de Dungeons & Dragons, este es uno de los RPG más míticos de la historia, en una edición que combina el juego original con su expansión, añade jugabilidad sacada de Baldur’s Gate II y permite conocer a la perfección los Reinos Olvidados. Si nunca has tirado un dado de 20 caras no te preocupes: no es condición obligatoria para disfrutar.
Adios
No nos estamos despidiendo, sino todo lo contrario: después de jugar a este juego en primera persona lo que nos dirás será “gracias”. Y es que jugarás como un granjero de Kansas que da de comer los cuerpos asesinados por la mafia a los cerdos hasta que decide que ya es suficiente. Entonces empieza una discusión entre tu amigo, un mafioso que te lleva un cuerpo para la rutina de siempre, y tú. Y si no puede convencerte, tendrá que matarte. Tú dirás si no te apetece jugar muchísimo y descubrir cuál será tu decisión.
Book of demons
Un hack and slash en el que cada aventura será diferente: las mazmorras se construyen de manera aleatoria, y solo tú decides la duración de las misiones. Con más de 70 monstruos y un buen puñado de hechizos y de maneras de ganar, es difícil encontrar un juego más épico que este.
Peaky Blinders: Mastermind
Puede que creas que un juego basado en una serie de televisión no puede, bajo ningún concepto, ser bueno. Peaky Blinders: Mastermind no viene a romper ningún estereotipo, pero resulta sorprendentemente interesante. Un juego de puzzles con una mecánica adicional de control del tiempo. No cambiará tu vida, pero si eres fan merece la pena echar un vistazo.
Y además, si te sabe a poco, los juegos que habitualmente se encuentran en Prime Gaming: Metal Slug X, Metal Slug, The last blade y SNK 40th anniversary collection. ¡Ah! Y contenido para vicios eternos como Overwatch 2, FIFA 23, Fall Guys o League of Legends, entre decenas de posibilidades. Y todo por lo que ya estás pagando por tu cuenta Prime. Tú dirás si vale la pena.
A las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime.
Quien no juega sin parar, es porque no quiere. Y es que a las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime: desde plataformas locos hasta puzzles, clásicos y rol. Coge tu mando: ¡Literalmente no pierdes nada si el juego no te gusta!
Faraway: Arctic Escape
Relájate… Si puedes. La secuela de Faraway llega con puzzles de esos que te revientan la cabeza a base de pensar, lugares increíbles que explorar y situaciones que harán que te acerques poco a poco a tu padre perdido. Eso sí, prepárate para darle vueltas a todo (literalmente) en uno de los mejores juegos de romperte el coco de los últimos años.
Baldur’s Gate: Edición Mejorada
Nacido de las páginas de Dungeons & Dragons, este es uno de los RPG más míticos de la historia, en una edición que combina el juego original con su expansión, añade jugabilidad sacada de Baldur’s Gate II y permite conocer a la perfección los Reinos Olvidados. Si nunca has tirado un dado de 20 caras no te preocupes: no es condición obligatoria para disfrutar.
Adios
No nos estamos despidiendo, sino todo lo contrario: después de jugar a este juego en primera persona lo que nos dirás será “gracias”. Y es que jugarás como un granjero de Kansas que da de comer los cuerpos asesinados por la mafia a los cerdos hasta que decide que ya es suficiente. Entonces empieza una discusión entre tu amigo, un mafioso que te lleva un cuerpo para la rutina de siempre, y tú. Y si no puede convencerte, tendrá que matarte. Tú dirás si no te apetece jugar muchísimo y descubrir cuál será tu decisión.
Book of demons
Un hack and slash en el que cada aventura será diferente: las mazmorras se construyen de manera aleatoria, y solo tú decides la duración de las misiones. Con más de 70 monstruos y un buen puñado de hechizos y de maneras de ganar, es difícil encontrar un juego más épico que este.
Peaky Blinders: Mastermind
Puede que creas que un juego basado en una serie de televisión no puede, bajo ningún concepto, ser bueno. Peaky Blinders: Mastermind no viene a romper ningún estereotipo, pero resulta sorprendentemente interesante. Un juego de puzzles con una mecánica adicional de control del tiempo. No cambiará tu vida, pero si eres fan merece la pena echar un vistazo.
Y además, si te sabe a poco, los juegos que habitualmente se encuentran en Prime Gaming: Metal Slug X, Metal Slug, The last blade y SNK 40th anniversary collection. ¡Ah! Y contenido para vicios eternos como Overwatch 2, FIFA 23, Fall Guys o League of Legends, entre decenas de posibilidades. Y todo por lo que ya estás pagando por tu cuenta Prime. Tú dirás si vale la pena.
A las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime.
Quien no juega sin parar, es porque no quiere. Y es que a las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime: desde plataformas locos hasta puzzles, clásicos y rol. Coge tu mando: ¡Literalmente no pierdes nada si el juego no te gusta!
Faraway: Arctic Escape
Relájate… Si puedes. La secuela de Faraway llega con puzzles de esos que te revientan la cabeza a base de pensar, lugares increíbles que explorar y situaciones que harán que te acerques poco a poco a tu padre perdido. Eso sí, prepárate para darle vueltas a todo (literalmente) en uno de los mejores juegos de romperte el coco de los últimos años.
Baldur’s Gate: Edición Mejorada
Nacido de las páginas de Dungeons & Dragons, este es uno de los RPG más míticos de la historia, en una edición que combina el juego original con su expansión, añade jugabilidad sacada de Baldur’s Gate II y permite conocer a la perfección los Reinos Olvidados. Si nunca has tirado un dado de 20 caras no te preocupes: no es condición obligatoria para disfrutar.
Adios
No nos estamos despidiendo, sino todo lo contrario: después de jugar a este juego en primera persona lo que nos dirás será “gracias”. Y es que jugarás como un granjero de Kansas que da de comer los cuerpos asesinados por la mafia a los cerdos hasta que decide que ya es suficiente. Entonces empieza una discusión entre tu amigo, un mafioso que te lleva un cuerpo para la rutina de siempre, y tú. Y si no puede convencerte, tendrá que matarte. Tú dirás si no te apetece jugar muchísimo y descubrir cuál será tu decisión.
Book of demons
Un hack and slash en el que cada aventura será diferente: las mazmorras se construyen de manera aleatoria, y solo tú decides la duración de las misiones. Con más de 70 monstruos y un buen puñado de hechizos y de maneras de ganar, es difícil encontrar un juego más épico que este.
Peaky Blinders: Mastermind
Puede que creas que un juego basado en una serie de televisión no puede, bajo ningún concepto, ser bueno. Peaky Blinders: Mastermind no viene a romper ningún estereotipo, pero resulta sorprendentemente interesante. Un juego de puzzles con una mecánica adicional de control del tiempo. No cambiará tu vida, pero si eres fan merece la pena echar un vistazo.
Y además, si te sabe a poco, los juegos que habitualmente se encuentran en Prime Gaming: Metal Slug X, Metal Slug, The last blade y SNK 40th anniversary collection. ¡Ah! Y contenido para vicios eternos como Overwatch 2, FIFA 23, Fall Guys o League of Legends, entre decenas de posibilidades. Y todo por lo que ya estás pagando por tu cuenta Prime. Tú dirás si vale la pena.
A las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime.
Quien no juega sin parar, es porque no quiere. Y es que a las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime: desde plataformas locos hasta puzzles, clásicos y rol. Coge tu mando: ¡Literalmente no pierdes nada si el juego no te gusta!
Faraway: Arctic Escape
Relájate… Si puedes. La secuela de Faraway llega con puzzles de esos que te revientan la cabeza a base de pensar, lugares increíbles que explorar y situaciones que harán que te acerques poco a poco a tu padre perdido. Eso sí, prepárate para darle vueltas a todo (literalmente) en uno de los mejores juegos de romperte el coco de los últimos años.
Baldur’s Gate: Edición Mejorada
Nacido de las páginas de Dungeons & Dragons, este es uno de los RPG más míticos de la historia, en una edición que combina el juego original con su expansión, añade jugabilidad sacada de Baldur’s Gate II y permite conocer a la perfección los Reinos Olvidados. Si nunca has tirado un dado de 20 caras no te preocupes: no es condición obligatoria para disfrutar.
Adios
No nos estamos despidiendo, sino todo lo contrario: después de jugar a este juego en primera persona lo que nos dirás será “gracias”. Y es que jugarás como un granjero de Kansas que da de comer los cuerpos asesinados por la mafia a los cerdos hasta que decide que ya es suficiente. Entonces empieza una discusión entre tu amigo, un mafioso que te lleva un cuerpo para la rutina de siempre, y tú. Y si no puede convencerte, tendrá que matarte. Tú dirás si no te apetece jugar muchísimo y descubrir cuál será tu decisión.
Book of demons
Un hack and slash en el que cada aventura será diferente: las mazmorras se construyen de manera aleatoria, y solo tú decides la duración de las misiones. Con más de 70 monstruos y un buen puñado de hechizos y de maneras de ganar, es difícil encontrar un juego más épico que este.
Peaky Blinders: Mastermind
Puede que creas que un juego basado en una serie de televisión no puede, bajo ningún concepto, ser bueno. Peaky Blinders: Mastermind no viene a romper ningún estereotipo, pero resulta sorprendentemente interesante. Un juego de puzzles con una mecánica adicional de control del tiempo. No cambiará tu vida, pero si eres fan merece la pena echar un vistazo.
Y además, si te sabe a poco, los juegos que habitualmente se encuentran en Prime Gaming: Metal Slug X, Metal Slug, The last blade y SNK 40th anniversary collection. ¡Ah! Y contenido para vicios eternos como Overwatch 2, FIFA 23, Fall Guys o League of Legends, entre decenas de posibilidades. Y todo por lo que ya estás pagando por tu cuenta Prime. Tú dirás si vale la pena.
A las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime.
Quien no juega sin parar, es porque no quiere. Y es que a las ofertas continuas y a iniciativas como Game Pass en Xbox se suma Prime Gaming, la selección de juegos gratuitos (y add-ons, trucos y más) de Amazon Prime: desde plataformas locos hasta puzzles, clásicos y rol. Coge tu mando: ¡Literalmente no pierdes nada si el juego no te gusta!
Faraway: Arctic Escape
Relájate… Si puedes. La secuela de Faraway llega con puzzles de esos que te revientan la cabeza a base de pensar, lugares increíbles que explorar y situaciones que harán que te acerques poco a poco a tu padre perdido. Eso sí, prepárate para darle vueltas a todo (literalmente) en uno de los mejores juegos de romperte el coco de los últimos años.
Baldur’s Gate: Edición Mejorada
Nacido de las páginas de Dungeons & Dragons, este es uno de los RPG más míticos de la historia, en una edición que combina el juego original con su expansión, añade jugabilidad sacada de Baldur’s Gate II y permite conocer a la perfección los Reinos Olvidados. Si nunca has tirado un dado de 20 caras no te preocupes: no es condición obligatoria para disfrutar.
Adios
No nos estamos despidiendo, sino todo lo contrario: después de jugar a este juego en primera persona lo que nos dirás será “gracias”. Y es que jugarás como un granjero de Kansas que da de comer los cuerpos asesinados por la mafia a los cerdos hasta que decide que ya es suficiente. Entonces empieza una discusión entre tu amigo, un mafioso que te lleva un cuerpo para la rutina de siempre, y tú. Y si no puede convencerte, tendrá que matarte. Tú dirás si no te apetece jugar muchísimo y descubrir cuál será tu decisión.
Book of demons
Un hack and slash en el que cada aventura será diferente: las mazmorras se construyen de manera aleatoria, y solo tú decides la duración de las misiones. Con más de 70 monstruos y un buen puñado de hechizos y de maneras de ganar, es difícil encontrar un juego más épico que este.
Peaky Blinders: Mastermind
Puede que creas que un juego basado en una serie de televisión no puede, bajo ningún concepto, ser bueno. Peaky Blinders: Mastermind no viene a romper ningún estereotipo, pero resulta sorprendentemente interesante. Un juego de puzzles con una mecánica adicional de control del tiempo. No cambiará tu vida, pero si eres fan merece la pena echar un vistazo.
Y además, si te sabe a poco, los juegos que habitualmente se encuentran en Prime Gaming: Metal Slug X, Metal Slug, The last blade y SNK 40th anniversary collection. ¡Ah! Y contenido para vicios eternos como Overwatch 2, FIFA 23, Fall Guys o League of Legends, entre decenas de posibilidades. Y todo por lo que ya estás pagando por tu cuenta Prime. Tú dirás si vale la pena.
We have compiled the five most frustrating villains in the saga so that you do not feel sorry to go for them. Let the looting begin!
There is no good without evil or yin without yang, although in the GTA saga it is not very clear which is which: although there is a protagonist and an antagonist, the truth is that sometimes it is quite complicated to know which of the two is really the bad guy of the movie (or rather of the video game). In any case, what is clear is that in every installment of the saga there will be an enemy that will try to get under your nose throughout your game. Luckily, and so that you can be prepared, we have compiled the five most frustrating villains of the saga so that you won’t be embarrassed to go after them. Let the plundering begin!
Before GTA IV, Darko sold all his comrades in exchange for black money. And, despite everything, you can’t help but understand his pain. He is a broken person, destroyed by a war (the Bosnian one) in which he saw the people he loved die. If, when the time comes, you decided to kill him, you will surely still have a heavy heart for that “Thank you” he mumbles just before hitting him with the first of the twelve shots in the head. And in the end, revenge solves nothing. As always.
It was the game that started the large-scale craze for GTA: San Andreas. And the hatred for Big Smoke is not for less: he is the first friendly face you meet in the city, your colleague… and the person who would betray anyone to get to the top. His crimes include drug trafficking and the murder of an innocent woman, all to get more money and power. When you finally manage to finish him off it is not the triumphant moment you expected, but leaves a bitter aftertaste. In the end, you loved to hate him.
Several of these enemies have reasons to be villains, but Devin Weston doesn’t need it. And that’s why he is, by far, the most infuriating of all: he is absurdly millionaire, he has money to do whatever he wants and he never stops bragging and believing that everyone (literally, everyone) works for him. The best thing that can happen to him in GTA V is to end up in the trunk of a car that ends up exploding. He won’t be missed.
He may not be the most remembered villain of the saga, but he is the most psychopathic and evil. The main antagonist of Vice City (voiced by the recently deceased Tom Sizemore) is an egomaniac who used Tommy for fifteen years and in the end doesn’t even regret it when he dies in his arms. The good part is that he doesn’t cheat: from the first minute he comes across as a manipulative, greedy madman who is best left to time to forget.
1-Frank Tenpenny
You knew this list was going to end like this, didn’t you? A corrupt cop running a small criminal empire and murdering innocent civilians to maintain his public image, how could we like him? San Andreas is a great game with a villain to match. An absolutely terrible human being who at the same time is the first person you meet in the city. Leaving him lying on the ground and making a reference to that first encounter is the best way to leave him behind forever.
Although we all have our tricks, there are always some ways to improve and guess the hidden word.
Wordle: the crossword puzzle for millennials. For a few months now, getting up, making a cup of coffee and, in the middle of the night, trying to get the Wordle of the day has been part of our routine. However, although we all have our tricks, there are always a few ways to improve and guess the hidden word. If you see the world in yellow and green letters, here’s how to improve your score.
The winning word
If you have never played Wordle, don’t worry: it is incredibly easy to do so (or any of its spin-offs, such as Heardle or Wordle in Spanish). It’s all about guessing a five-letter word: as you come up with possible solutions, the program will indicate in yellow the letters that are in another place and in green the correct ones. Find the secret word in less than seven tries and you win. As simple and addictive as that.
There are little tricks to win as quickly as possible, although it is not always possible to carry them out: try to avoid repeating letters in gray, neither yellow nor green, even if they fit, as well as yellow letters that are in the same position as in previous words. Remember two things: first, that a letter can appear twice in a word (and often does, in fact). Second, on the first try you should spend as many vowels as you can using words like “audio”, leaving only one vowel to try in the following attempts.
If you play in English (which is great for practicing the language), note that the four most common beginnings are “Tr”, “Th”, “Br” and “St”, and the four endings are “Ck”, “Ng”, “Ty” and “Ry”. No need to know much more: get ready to activate your brain better than Doctor Kawashima would, and start playing Wordle like a champ!
14 years have passed since that first game and since then we haven't heard much from PopCap, its developers. And it's what… What happened to them?
Surely you remember the first time you played Plants Vs Zombies: a game as simple in appearance as it was complex to master, which relied on the player’s ability to plant the right sunflowers and place the perfect plants and guessing strategies that ended on a high note, with one of the biggest hits in the history of video games (only second only to Portal’s Still Alive). But 14 years have passed since that first game and since then we haven’t had much news from PopCap, its developers. So… What has become of them?
Sexy Action Cool
Year 2000, Seattle. Jason Kapalka founds Sexy Action Cool, his own video game company, together with John Vechey and Brian Fiete. The idea was to create innovative video games that they were passionate about, even if they first had to make cheap but attention-grabbing stuff to make easy money. Their first attempt was Foxy Poker, which was about, you guessed it, a game of strip poker.
Sadly for them, the game did not succeed (for whatever reason) and in fact it is currently lost, but the fame they did not get then was achieved with their next release, the famous Bejeweled (formerly known as Diamond Mine), which at that time was played directly from the Internet. Between Diamond Mine and Bejeweled it took four months of development and they achieved more than ten million units sold between all the platforms where it was adapted, from Blackberry to… the first iPod.
Sexy Action Cool had already changed its name to PopCap, and its success was such that it even acquired a casual games company and expanded outside Seattle: they opened a company in Dublin and planned, between sequels to Bejeweled and other casual video games (such as Peggle and Bookworm), what they had always wanted to do. That is, a completely original title that would change the rules of the game.
In 2001, George Fan, a Californian developer, created a game called Insaniquarium that mixed pet simulation, strategy, action and puzzles. Years later, he was still kicking around the idea of making a sequel, which eventually led to a tower defense between plants and zombies. The PopCap team, passionate about the subject, took three and a half years to put the game together before launching it on May 5, 2009. A decade after its founding, they had finally achieved what they were looking for: a more or less original, epoch-making hit.
Plants Vs Zombies (which was going to be called Lawn of the Dead until George A. Romero expressly forbade it) took ideas from Warcraft III, Magic The Gathering and Swiss Family Robinson, but gave them the perfect twist to create a little adventure game with no micropayments, the old-fashioned way. The game came to iPhone, Android and consoles over the years and became PopCap’s fastest selling game ever.
To give you an idea: in just nine days, sales on iOS exceeded one million dollars, so PopCap had an incredible future ahead of it. And then, as in all horror stories, along came the big bad wolf. In this case, Electronic Arts, which bought the company on July 12, 2011 for $560 million. And when you’re bought by someone like Electronic Arts, they want immediate results: the beginning of the end.
More plants, more zombies
Since its purchase, PopCap has not released a single original game: only sequels to Peggle, Zuma, Bejeweled and, of course, Plants Vs Zombies. In August 2012, in fact, they announced that they would lay off fifty employees to focus on developing free-to-play games with micropayments. Said and done: in 2013, Plants Vs Zombies 2: It’s About Time was fun enough to ignore the fact that every so often you were pushed to buy power-ups and novelties.
The sequel was a bigger hit than the original: it sold 25 million units in one month, setting the franchise up for success. But greed is dangerous, and after PopCap Vancouver took a chance (and succeeded) with the two great Garden Warfare games, it was time to go back to mobile: Plants vs Zombies Heroes launched in 2016 with the ability to play on any of the two teams and with a system similar to that of Hearthstone… And with increasingly annoying and intrusive ads and micropayments.
And since then, beyond another console game similar to Garden Warfare, nothing. Plants vs Zombies 3 remains an eternal promise that they’ve been developing for years and years doing something they hadn’t done up to that point: disregard EA’s pleas and listen, instead, to the fans. In July 2019, a pre-alpha was released on Android. Then, in October 2020, there was a worldwide release, but it was so criticized for continuous micropayments that it was withdrawn a month later. In 2021 there was another attempt, but so far there hasn’t been an official release… And EA is starting to get nervous.
With a broken management team, a community of fans demanding a return to the basics of the first game, a canceled animated film, and several canceled projects, the question is in the air: will they, like Rovio, manage to stay afloat, or before even from the third party PopCap has already died… but no one has warned them?
What happened to them? What happened to Rovio before and after Angry Birds?
If we make a list of the fifty most important video games in history, there would have to be Super Mario Bros or Call Of Duty, yes, but also Angry Birds, a mobile game that arrived three years before Candy Crush in a world where having the phone full of apps was still something grotesque and that turned a small studio in Finland into a money-making machine. But what happened to Rovio before and after Angry Birds?
Before the angry birds
Year 2003. Three technology students from the University of Helsinki participate in a mobile game development contest and manage to set up King of the Cabbage World, which would later be known as Mole War and helped them set up their own company, which they called, effectively, Relude. Or, as we all knew it after they changed the name to a better one, Rovio.
“Rovio” means “pyre” in Finnish, and that’s why its logo is a kind of flame that has not been extinguished for two decades now. And for six years they had to fight to stay in the market, either through mobile games based on licenses (Need for Speed: Carbon, X-Factor 2008) and other more or less original ones. The problem was that someone understood the potential of playing on a cell phone at a time when the word “app” meant nothing. To put it another way: what’s the point of making good games if there’s no one to play them?
And then, in 2007, the iPhone arrived and everything changed: mobile games were no longer difficult to access, the target was literally everyone, and Rovio saw their chance to, after 51 attempts, get a little piece of the market. They only had three rules for their last great game before bankruptcy, Square style: it didn’t need a tutorial, its loading times should be minimal and one minute of gameplay should be enough to have an optimal experience. Oh, and a flashy icon on the App Store wouldn’t hurt. Before losing everything, what’s the worst that could happen?
After several designs for a possible game, the management team was left with some angry birds that they found amusing. They found a reason for their anger (pigs had stolen their eggs) and spent 25,000 euros creating screens and their physics in their spare time. Six months later, Rovio had released four apps for other companies and had Angry Birds on the verge of success. And the proof that the game was addictive was that the mother of one of Rovio’s founders saw (well, smelled) her turkey burn on Thanksgiving because she was hooked on a trial version. All that was left to do was to throw it in a slingshot and see what happened. Success guaranteed… Or did it?
Angry birds
In December 2009, Rovio launched Angry Birds and it became, overnight… a bit of a flop. It didn’t take off in the United States or the United Kingdom, but it did in smaller markets. Little by little, between Finland, Greece, Sweden and Denmark, the game accumulated 40,000 downloads, enough to stay alive for a few more months. But in February 2010 everything changed. After Apple selected it as Game of the Week, it went from 600th to first place. And it would take quite a while to move from there.
At first, the business was clear: the game cost money on iOS and was fed by ads on Android, but it gradually fell into the game of microtransactions. For example, for 89 cents an eagle that appeared in one of the updates could solve a level in which you were stuck and move on to the next: more than two million people used it. There were screens to pass, of course: although the first installment had only one chapter of 21 levels, at the end of its life it had almost five hundred. Almost nothing.
And then came the madness: Rovio put aside the rest of its projects to focus exclusively on Angry Birds. First came Angry Birds Seasons, in 2010, which was updated at different key moments of the year (Halloween, Christmas, the first day of school). Then, Angry Birds Rio, a crossover with the movie, of course, Rio. From then on, the madness.
After the angry birds
Crossovers with Star Wars and Transformers, racing games (Angry Birds Go!), RPGs (Angry Birds Epic), pinball (Angry Birds Action), tile-matching (Angry Birds Match), virtual reality… The saga has expanded to 28 games, two movies, 9 TV series and countless books. They even have theme park attractions! However, for some time now, longtime fans are not happy with them… And rightly so. It all goes back to the first game, before microtransactions were our everyday life.
And the fact is that Angry Birds has been removed from the app stores because -seriously- it overshadowed Rovio’s novelties. Just as it sounds. On iOS, Rovio Classics: Angry Birds, which costs 0.99 euros, has changed its name to Red’s First Flight, and on Android it has disappeared altogether. In fact, we can find Angry Birds 2, Angry Birds Friends or Angry Birds Dream Blast, but no trace of the original.
Rovio has based its business model so much on micropayments that promise a falsely free game, that a game like the first Angry Birds, in which everything was paid from the beginning, could hurt them in the face of an audience that has lost, in a decade, quite a lot of interest in the franchise’s games. In addition, it cannot be said that what Rovio has done outside the saga has been successful: Selfie Slam, Retry (an attempt to capitalize on Flappy Bird) or Love Rocks Starring Shakira have not had enough pull to imagine a future for the company without slingshots, pigs and trying to milk the (red) golden bird.
LEGO has set to work to put all its pieces together and create a competitor to match: LEGO 2K Drive
Since Super Mario Kart took Super Nintendo by storm thirty years ago, there have been hundreds of games that have tried to follow in its wake with all kinds of results. We have seen characters from Nickelodeon, Disney and even from the Crash Bandicoot or Sonic sagas racing in karts, but nothing has ever been able to stand up to our friends from the Mushroom Kingdom.
Open world, destroyed parts
However, LEGO has set to work to put all its pieces together and create a competitor to match: LEGO 2K Drive, which will bring together the toy construction magnate with 2K, responsible for sagas like Bioshock or NBA 2K. The weirdest thing is that it has not only been announced as a racing game, but also… Open world!
At the moment, besides some images, only the name of the first tracks where we will race has been leaked: Runaway Roundabout, Rapid Falls, Swampus, Cat Scratch Freeway, Down on the Farm, Glazed Overdrive, Headless Horsepower and Chasm Crossing. How will the classic kart tracks fit in with the open world concept? That is something that nobody knows yet, but in the menus of the game it has been possible to see the indication of “Shared World” that perhaps unites, in an online way, all the circuits.
Of course, and this should come as no surprise to anyone, 2K is already planning on how to monetize the game with in-game purchases. Since it’s still in the testing process, we’re still a while away from seeing it. It’s worth noting that this isn’t the first time LEGO has been attracted to the smell of burning tire on asphalt (so to speak): LEGO Racers was already a hit on Nintendo 64, and Drome Racers, set in the future and dangerous year 2015, made its appearance on PlayStation 2, GameCube and Game Boy Advance.