'Angry Birds Space' Game to Blast Off with NASA Aboard
Heads up, universe: A flock of furious feathered fighters is coming your way.
Having conquered Earth — or at least its mobile and social networks — Angry Birds is launching into outer space with the latest version of Rovio Mobile's popular strategy puzzle game.
Announced last week, Angry Birds Space will blast off on March 22 with NASA along for the ride. The space agency may have even inspired the game, appropriately enough through a tweet.
"We might be able to help you launch birds if you find pigs in space," NASA wrote Rovio on Twitter in March 2011.
"Sounds good!" the Finnish game developer said in reply. "It might happen in the not too distant future..."
Less than a year later, and with a Space Act Agreement in hand, Rovio and NASA are now counting down to a cross-platform launch that Rovio says will go where no mobile game has gone before.
"We'll launch simultaneously in mobile gaming, animation, retail and publishing," Rovio stated. "Not only is this a first for us as an integrated entertainment company, but the first time this has ever been done for a mobile game!" [Top 5 Games for iPhone 4]
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Slinging into space
The Angry Birds Space website and video teaser released on Feb. 17 doesn't offer a lot of information yet, other than the release date and the Neil Armstrong-inspired slogan, "One small fling for a bird, one quantum leap for birdkind."
A graphic on the site shows a slingshot firmly planted on the moon. In the original Angry Birds, and in its follow-on versions Seasons and Rio, players use a similar slingshot to launch a flock of multi-colored birds at hungry green pigs, knocking over wood, stone and ice structures in the process.
Rovio said it would release more details about Angry Birds Space in early March but shared with Yahoo! Games that the game would introduce some new types of birds while bringing back some from the earlier games, but now enhanced with "super powers."
"You'll be lobbing birds on entirely new planets," Yahoo! Games' Ben Silverman wrote, adding that players will have to contend with zero gravity and new gameplay elements such as slow-motion puzzles and "lightspeed" destruction.
Andrew Stalbow with Rovio North America told Silverman that the Angry Birds Space environments would continue to employ real physics, lending an educational component to the game.
"Science and education are very important to us, and we are very excited to have NASA and National Geographic as launch partners on Angry Birds Space," Stalbow said.
For its part, the space agency is "excited to see elements of space exploration and science integrated into play," a NASA spokesman told collectSPACE.com.
Angry Birds Space: The prequels
Angry Birds Space will not mark the first time, however, that Angry Birds has ventured into space — in the game or in real life.
Last year, Rovio added two levels to Angry Birds Seasons with a space theme. One was a bonus level that was unlocked only after players found golden eggs, but the other, Level 1-17 of "Summer Pignic," featured an Apollo-style lunar module and lunar rover, as well as decreased gravity slowing the rate at which the birds fell to the ground.
Released on July 8, 2011, the special moon landing level was timed so it coincided with NASA's last space shuttle mission, which lifted off the same day. Representatives from Rovio came to the launch as guests of NASA.
Several months later, a plush Angry Bird doll flew in real life to the International Space Station on board a Russian rocket. The small, stuffed toy red bird launched with two cosmonauts and a NASA astronaut, continuing a Russian tradition of flying small toys as "zero-g indicators."
Picked out by the commander's five-year-old daughter, the Angry Bird doll signaled to the launching crew that they made it to space when it started to float inside the spacecraft's cabin.
The plush Angry Bird and its crewmates will still be on the station when Angry Birds Space is released on March 22.
Click through to collectSPACE.com to watch Rovio’s teaser video for Angry Birds Space.
Follow collectSPACE on Facebook and Twitter @collectSPACEand editor Robert Pearlman @robertpearlman. Copyright 2011 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved.
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Robert Pearlman is a space historian, journalist and the founder and editor of collectSPACE.com, an online publication and community devoted to space history with a particular focus on how and where space exploration intersects with pop culture. Pearlman is also a contributing writer for Space.com and co-author of "Space Stations: The Art, Science, and Reality of Working in Space” published by Smithsonian Books in 2018. He previously developed online content for the National Space Society and Apollo 11 moonwalker Buzz Aldrin, helped establish the space tourism company Space Adventures and currently serves on the History Committee of the American Astronautical Society, the advisory committee for The Mars Generation and leadership board of For All Moonkind. In 2009, he was inducted into the U.S. Space Camp Hall of Fame in Huntsville, Alabama. In 2021, he was honored by the American Astronautical Society with the Ordway Award for Sustained Excellence in Spaceflight History.