Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Flappy Bird creator denounces remake, claims it’s tied to crypto

Add as a preferred source on Google
The Flappy bird in the center of the screen. There are sunbeams behind them.
Flappy Bird Foundation

The original creator of Flappy Bird has disavowed the just-announced mobile remake, connecting it to crypto and distancing himself from the project.

The new game, announced last week, was the “official” return of the mobile games classic, and would be including the core gameplay, along with new single- and multiplayer game modes and characters. Developer Dong Nguyen posted a short statement on X (formerly Twitter) clarifying that he was not involved with the new game, and “I also don’t support crypto.”

Recommended Videos

No, I have no related with their game. I did not sell anything.
I also don't support crypto.

— Dong Nguyen (@dongatory) September 15, 2024

While the original press release doesn’t note any explicit connection to Nguyen, the Flappy Bird marketing materials seem to specify a connection. “Just a decade ago, I was the talk of the town … Sadly, I had to leave the fame and spotlight behind to go home and find out who I really am,” the website homepage says. It goes on to say that it “worked with my predecessor to uncage me.” This could refer to Nguyen, but also Kek, the developer behind Piou Piou vs. Cactus, credited as the spiritual predecessor to Flappy Bird.

The crypto comment refers to research done by cybersecurity researcher Varun Biniwale, who published a post to his website Thursday laying out some “fishy” aspects, as Biniwale called it, with the project. He wrote that Michael Roberts, the chief creative behind the new Flappy Bird, was connected with a company called 1208 Productions, which owned the NFT brand Deez and worked in web3 since 2021. While Roberts’ X profile lists 1208 Productions’ website in Biniwale’s post, it now just lists the new Flappy Bird website. 1208’s website, at the time of this writing, doesn’t list any of its web3 or NFT projects, but you can see them in through the Wayback Machine.

Biniwale also dug into the website’s metadata, pulling out some prototypes that mention connecting the game to various crypto wallets, and leaderboards that appear to include crypto influencers.

Nguyen published Flappy Bird on mobile games stores starting in 2013, but removed it in 2014 because it had “become an addictive product,” he told Forbes. He hasn’t touched it since, although many developers tried to cash in on the craze with clones.

According to court documents from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (thanks to developer Sam “Samperson” Chiet for this X thread), Gametech Holdings LLC, the company named by Flappy Bird Foundation as the copyright owner, filed a claim on the trademark in 2023. Additionally, it appears a company called Mobile Media Partners, registered at the same address as Gametech, attempted to officially register a trademark in February 2014 around the time the original Flappy Bird was taken offline for a website called flappybirdreturns.com. The documents say that it had “reserved/acquired the name from Apple in their Apps Store.” It was officially registered in 2018.

Another document from 2023 states that Gametech, the now-owner, had to use it before March 27, 2024. Looks like Nguyen filed an opposition — also in March 2024. However, the lawyers for Gametech said that Nguyen hadn’t used the Flappy Bird name in a decade and had publicly disavowed it. An exhibit also points to the trademark registration in 2018. Nguyen then didn’t meet certain deadlines in the proceedings, so the claim against Gametech was terminated.

The Flappy Bird website claims that there was a “decade-long mission” that involved “acquiring legal rights.”

Carli Velocci
Carli is a technology, culture, and games editor and journalist. They were the Gaming Lead and Copy Chief at Windows Central…
Well… at least God of War Laufey is getting a physical disc
Santa Monica Studio quietly confirmed the upcoming adventure won't be download-only.
God of War Laufey screenshot

Last week, Sony lit the gaming community on fire by announcing that all new PlayStation games released from January 2028 onwards would be digital-only, effectively bringing an end to physical discs for future releases. At the same time, the company also confirmed it would shut down the PlayStation 3 and PS Vita digital stores by July 2027, reinforcing concerns that digital storefronts and the games tied to them don't last forever. Unsurprisingly, the announcements triggered widespread backlash from collectors and long-time PlayStation fans. In the middle of all that, Santa Monica Studio offered a surprisingly comforting update: God of War Laufey will be available on disc. It's only one sentence, but it says a lot.

More than just a physical release

Read more
Samsung has a new breed of OBLYX OLED panels and they should appear on your gaming laptops soon
Samsung's new OBLYX brand is all about OLED gaming laptops
Samsung Display’s Gaming-optimized OLED Products Showcased at COMPUTEX 2026

Samsung Display has introduced OBLYX, its first dedicated OLED brand for gaming laptops, as the company looks to strengthen its position in one of the fastest-growing segments of the PC market. The announcement was made at Bilibili World 2026 (BW2026) in Shanghai, marking Samsung Display's first appearance at China's largest gaming and anime convention.

Rather than unveiling a new display technology, Samsung is creating a recognizable identity for its gaming-focused OLED panels, much like established branding for processors or graphics cards. The move also hints at the company's ambitions in China, where demand for OLED-equipped gaming laptops is accelerating rapidly, according to a Digital Today report.

Read more
Razer made a Cinnamoroll headset, and it is aggressively adorable
Razer launches a Cinnamoroll Edition Kraken Kitty V2 BT headset
Razer Kraken Kitty V2 BT Cinnamonroll themed gaming headphones

Razer’s Sanrio collaboration has already produced a full desk setup, and the final drop is now here. The company has launched the Razer Kraken Kitty V2 BT Cinnamoroll Edition, a wireless headset themed around one of Sanrio’s most recognizable characters.

Cinnamoroll is a white puppy from Sanrio, the Japanese company behind Hello Kitty and several other globally recognized character brands. He is known for his long floppy ears, blue eyes, curly tail, and soft cloud-like look. As per the Sanrio lore, he was born high above the clouds and can fly by flapping his big ears. Razer has leaned heavily into that identity for this headset, replacing the usual kitty look with Cinnamoroll’s floppy ears and a sky-blue color scheme.

Read more