Angry Birds POP!

Angry Birds POP!

Angry Birds POP! game icon
Developer(s) Rovio Entertainment
Outplay Entertainment
Publisher(s) Rovio Entertainment
Series Angry Birds
Platform(s) iOS, Android, Microsoft Windows
Release date(s)
  • CAN: December 22, 2014
  • WW: March 12, 2015
Genre(s) Tile-matching

Angry Birds POP! is a tile matching game co-developed by Rovio Entertainment and Outplay Entertainment that was soft launched for iOS in Canada in December 2014[1] and released worldwide for iOS and Android devices in March 2015.[2] The game was the second game in the Angry Birds Stella series, and a spin-off of Angry Birds.

It was originally released as Angry Birds Stella POP!, and was given its current name with an update in July 2015. In October 2015, the game was released as a Facebook game.

Gameplay

Angry Birds POP! is the second game of the Angry Birds Stella series. The game released on December 22, 2014 in the Canada App Store and released worldwide on March 12, 2015. On October 29, 2015, the game was added to Facebook.The game features the slingshot lined up in the bottom center, the player flings the bubbles to pop the bubbles at the top with a combination of three or more bubbles with the same color. Each level will give you a limited number of bubbles given at the slingshot and you can buy more by coins. Sometimes, there are also blocks appears at the top along with the bubbles. The game also has lives like all other match-3 games. When you lose a level, you will lost one of it and if you lost all the lives, you must buy them by coins to continue playing. The game will features the six characters that appears in Angry Birds Stella and each character will have a special power that can be use when the Pop Meter is full to unlock powerful boosts from their powers like Stella's Power Pop, Poppy's Line Pop and many more. To fill the Pop Meter, you have to get x6 Streaks, that means 6 pops in a row.

Reception

Angry Birds POP! was seen by some as similar to King's 2014 title, Bubble Witch 2 Saga. The Macworld reviewer enjoyed it as a free game, with its light puzzle gameplay and good production values but once a barrier in play presents itself, the reviewer thought it was best to do something else.[3]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.