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Kongregate is the home for several idle/clicker games, including Adventure Capitalist, Crusaders of the Lost Idols, and Anti-Idle: The Game. On the web portal, users could upload Adobe Flash , HTML5 / JavaScript , Shockwave , Java , and Unity games with integrated high scores and achievement badges.
Chronotron is the only browser-based Flash game in the PAX 10 2008. [4] Chronotron has been described as "a very deep, complex game involving time travel and past selves." [5] Game designer Greg Costikyan described Chronotron as "a simple, satisfying, and enjoyable exploration of the effects of one novel mechanic on a well-established form."
[3] [8] Restarting the game by reloading it only brings up the grave of the dead player character. [3] [6] The game uses cache memory and temporary internet files to remain unplayable. [9] One player on Kongregate noted that he was still unable to play the game again after having played it on Newgrounds a few years prior. [10]
Flash video games were popular on the Internet, with portals like Newgrounds, Kongregate, and Armor Games dedicated to hosting Flash-based games. Many Flash games were developed by individuals or groups of friends due to the simplicity of the software. [26] Popular Flash games include Farmville, Alien Hominid, QWOP, Club Penguin, and Dofus. [27 ...
World 2 has been played over 14.8 million times on Armor Games, over 17.8 million times on Addicting Games and over 5 million times on Kongregate. World 2 also won the 2008 Newgrounds Tank Award for Best Flash Game, [ 25 ] and is the fifth most played Flash game of 2008 in the Mochi Media Flash game advertising network. [ 26 ]
Clicker Heroes was released as a Flash game on the gaming website Kongregate in August 2014, [7] and on Armor Games in September 2014. [8] It was released onto the Steam platform in May 2015 for Microsoft Windows and OS X. [9] On August 20, 2015, Clicker Heroes was released for iOS and Android. [10] Version 1.0 was released in June 2016. [11]
Originally, the game was promoted through the web service StumbleUpon, getting further boosts from popular bloggers such as Michael Arrington. [4] It eventually found its way onto several Flash game sites such as Kongregate. The game's popularity was further increased by exposure on the internet pop-culture websites Digg and I-am-bored.com.
They announced the game in mid August 2010, where they revealed that the game would release on Flash (through Kongregate [8]) and iOS simultaneously, [5] [c] which happened on August 29, 2010. [1] Joe Bergeron, a programmer who had previously worked on Dinowaurs with Mikengreg, helped with the iOS version of the game. [9] Solipskier made around ...