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The Life And Sudden Death Of 'Flappy Bird': How A Guy Making $50,000 Per Day Grew To 'Hate' His Own

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Dong Nguyen created Flappy Bird then suddenly shut it down. Celebritynetworth.com

Flappy Bird, the latest mobile craze, launched less than one year ago. At its peak, it was generating about $50,000 per day. It was run by one man, Dong Nguyen, an indie game developer in Vietnam.

If you've never played, Flappy Bird is simple: You tap your smart phone's screen to keep the bird afloat, and you steer him through a maze of pipes. Each pipe you successfully pass through gives you one point. If you hit a pipe, you die. The bird is very hard to navigate, so the game is frustrating to many players.

Over the weekend, Nguyen suddenly announced that he'd be shutting the game down. It's no longer available for download in the App or Google Play Store. iPhone users who have already downloaded it are trying to sell their devices on eBay.

Why did Flappy Bird take off, and why did its founder grow to hate it so much he shut it down?

You can interpret a lot from Nguyen's ~ 1,000 tweets. We sifted through them so you don't have to. Here's the rise and fall of mobile craze, Flappy Bird.

Nguyen woke up one morning last April inspired. He set out to create a few games. Flappy Bird was one of them.
Twitter via @dongatory
On April 29, the first iteration of Flappy Bird launched. Its original name was "Flap Flap" and the app was approved in just two days.
Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
The bird, which was designed in 2012, is named "Faby."
Twitter via @dongatory
When Flap Flap first went live, Nguyen scored 44 points. That's why the platinum badge in Flappy Bird is achieved when a player scores 40. Then players are achieving (and beating) Nguyen's original score.

Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
Nguyen had to change the name from "Flap Flap" to "Flappy Bird" because the name already existed. He doesn't like the name "Flappy Bird."

Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
Flappy Bird started picking up steam just before Christmas, when players started turning it into a meme. A lot of people wrote funny reviews of the app, and they started tweeting around photos of extreme frustration after the statement, "Flappy Bird got me like..."

Twitter via @dongatory

Word of mouth was all Flappy Bird needed to go viral. Nguyen didn't pay for any marketing at all. He says he didn't initially have resources to spend on advertising.
Twitter via @dongatory

Dong didn't expect his app to explode like this, or the money that came with it. The Verge reported he was pulling in about $50,000 per day.
Twitter via @dongatory
But soon, the game became too much for Nguyen. Players found out he was the creator and started tweeting aggressively at him. Nguyen tried to answer everyone calmly at first.

Twitter via @dongatory
Some attacks started getting personal, adding to Nguyen's stress. He was only one guy after all, trying to wrangle a viral beast.
Twitter via @dongatory
The game started taking up all of Nguyen's time. As he told one feisty player, "Because of you, [I have no life either]." 
Twitter via @dongatory
Emails started pouring in too. Nguyen couldn't keep up.
Twitter via @dongatory
People started attacking Nguyen's work, accusing him of stealing from Nintendo and Mario Brothers. Nguyen didn't agree.
Twitter via @dongatory
Investors started to take notice of Nguyen and offered him cash. But Nguyen wasn't interested in creating a real business. He doesn't consider himself an entrepreneur.
Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
The press started clamoring to get interviews with Nguyen. But he was happy as an Indie designer and didn't want the attention. "Please give me peace," he begged. 
Twitter via @dongatory
People started haggling Nguyen for more Flappy Bird updates and platforms. Nguyen became extremely overwhelmed.
Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
Nguyen said Flappy Bird was always intended to be a mini game, but that a sequel wouldn't be out of the question.
Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
Nguyen grew to hate his own game because his success ruined his simple life. He also doesn't like the way people are "overusing" his game and taking all the fun out of it.
Twitter via @dongatory
Twitter via @dongatory
Nguyen is also unhappy that he can never go back to being an ordinary indie game developer now.
Twitter via @dongatory
On February 8, Nguyen made up his mind: he was going to shut down the app. This weekend, the game disappeared from the App Store. Nguyen hasn't tweeted since. But don't worry, he says Flappy Bird isn't the last game we'll see from him.
Twitter via @dongatory

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Jenniffer Sheldon

Update: 2024-07-13