poker para pc
sites de apostas sem deposito
The world has changed drastically since then, and now Flash games are a dying breed - not least because most 🧾 modern browsers no longer support them. It's not been available on mobile for eight years since Android dropped it in 🧾 its 4.1 release.
But not all hope is lost. Preservation efforts for Flash games are well underway, and web gaming platform 🧾 Poki is significantly stepping up its own efforts by partnering with Nitrome, now a respected mobile studio, and adding 100 🧾 of the developer's old Flash titles to the platform.
To find out more about why it's preserving these games, we spoke 🧾 with Poki co-founder Michiel van Amerongen and other members of the team - as well as Nitrome's Mat Annal - 🧾 about the technical challenges of saving these games and why it's good business for everyone involved.
PocketGamer.biz: We last spoke with 🧾 you around four years ago following the launch of Color Switch on your platform. How has Poki grown and changed 🧾 over those four years?
Michiel van Amerongen: 2012 - 2024 was a challenging time for web games. The app stores had 🧾 exploded, Flash was on its way out, but its successor HTML5 was still a niche game development technology.