Angry Birds on Android is a superb Thing: a massively popular game making its option to Android, that is relatively gaming-starved. It’s also one of several most pointed examples of Android fragmentation.
Here’s a listing of each of the Android phones that Angry Birds isn’t officially supported on, listed in a blog post by developer Rovio :
Droid Eris
HTC Dream
HTC Hero
HTC Magic/Sapphire/Mytouch 3G
HTC Tattoo
HTC Wildfire
Huawei Ideos/U8150
LG Ally/Aloha/VS740
LG GW620/Eve
Motorola Backflip/MB300
Motorola Cliq/Dext
Samsung Acclaim
Samsung Moment/M900
Samsung Spica/i5700
Samsung Transform
Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 mini
T-Mobile G1
T-Mobile G2
Rovio says that, despite having ” hesitated to create multiple versions of Angry Birds” for Android, that’s exactly what they’re being forced to do so that it will meet their goal of having it available on as many Android phones as possible. So that they ‘re creating a ” lightweight solution” to run on devices that don’t currently support Angry Birds, or run it style of crappily.
Of course, you will see fragmentation in every platform-today’s most awesome iPhone game, Rage HD , doesn’t run on older iPhones and iPod touches. It’s just more pointed with Android, because you’re talking about more phones, and because among the phones on that list, like the G2, are pretty current.
While differing system reqs is only a fact of life with PCs-and no person would ever discuss it as ” fragmentation” -it’s definitely one aspect of phones changing into computers that we’re not super interested by.
[ Rovio via Twitter ]
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