10 things you didn’t know about mobile gaming

Published by Joel Willans on January 16, 2013

ARMED! on Nokia Lumia 920

Remember the first time you played a mobile phone game? You probably had to squint at blocky pixels on a tiny screen phone that beeped when you won. How times have changed. Today’s smartphones have gaming capabilities equivalent to a 5th generation gaming console, which is why we’re now spoiled with stunning games like ARMED

When you think about how it all began, the evolution of mobile gaming in the last nineteen years is incredible. To see just how incredible, we’ve unearthed ten fascinating facts you probably didn’t know.

One. The first mobile phone game was introduced in 1994. It was a pre-installed form of Tetris, which came on a mobile phone called the Hagenuk MT-2000.

Two. Three years later, in 1997, Nokia designed a version of Snake for selected phone models. It first appeared on the Nokia 6110 and has since been embedded on 400 million devices worldwide, making it the most played video game on the planet. Programmed by design engineer Taneli Armanto—it’s also now available on Lumia smartphones! One to play with your nostalgic old dad, perhaps…

snake

Three. The first “multi-player” gaming experience was also on a Nokia 6110. The game was a two-player version of Snake game, which could be played between two Nokia 6110 phones using the infrared port.

Four:  In 2003, Nokia launched the world’s first ever dedicated gaming mobile, the Nokia N-Gage. Its top selling game was a fishing sim called “Creatures of the Deep”.

Five: It’s probably no shock to hear that Rovio’s Angry Birds took the Best-Selling Mobile Series in 2012′s special Gamer’s Edition, with more than 250 million downloads.

Six:  Nowadays, smartphone owners spend 200 million minutes per day — 16 years every hour — playing Angry Birds.  An estimated three trillion pigs have been popped.

Lumia920 AngryBirds

Seven. In June 2011, Nokia Malaysia broke the record for the most people in a mobile phone game relay, by getting 2,030 folk to play, yup, Angry Birds, for 10 hours. And we thought basketball courts were crowded…

Eight: According to PopCap’s 2012 Mobile Gaming research, 59% of people in the UK or USA, who own a mobile device (either phone or tablet) have played a game on it in the past year. That’s an increase of 13% on 2011. Guess we’re letting our technological hair down!  

Nine: Each year the Academy of Interactive Arts and Science announces their Interactive Achievement Awards, and in 2012 they included for the first time the Mobile Game of the Year Award, which, we think, shows that the world is starting to truly embrace mobile gaming. Kapow!

aias-logo_1733f

Ten: A posse of Austrian die-hards currently hold the record for the longest mobile phone gaming marathon; their team clocked in 24 hours and 10 minutes continuous game-time in August 2011. Bet their fingers ached…

Mobile gaming has sure come a long way. But what does the future hold? Will we see more smartphone games getting us more involved with the physical world by making use of augmented reality and NFC? Or will they get even more immersive. As ever, we’d love to hear your thoughts.

Comments

  • http://blogbizbuzz.com/ Joan-BlogBizBuzz

    Did not know most of what is in this article, thoroughly enjoyed it thanks.

  • http://www.facebook.com/MarkAReynolds Mark Reynolds

    I think the single biggest change is the ability to transition game change seamlessly between different types of devices, using either cloud or NFC to make the transition from e.g. smartphone to large screen TV. NFC has the potential to make the transition process virtually instantaneous. Multi-player will certainly become more prevalent, and augmented reality can lead to a revival of the old treasure hunt for clues.

  • http://twitter.com/DenverOCR Mr B Hive

    Never had much time for games. Strictly business. Maybe I should look into this.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003770097644 شجاع المطيري

    I think you have missed the 4th one?

  • http://twitter.com/KayStone007 Kay Stone

    I play angry birds too much : )

  • http://www.newsmeback.com NewsMeBack

    It all sounds great but no matter the smartphones gaming capabilities, snake is snake ;)))

  • http://twitter.com/BobWarren Bob Warren

    Have a Super Duper Hump Day!

  • http://twitter.com/djduncan David Duncan

    Gamification is becoming more important around the web these days. Great to get an overview of some of the earlier versions

  • K. Doug Allen

    Angry Birds , Air Control, ect. All games that find a perfect home on a small hi rez screen.

  • Matthew Paul

    There seems to be a mistake on number 6: ’16 years every hour’. I know Angry Birds is good and can kill time, but I was not aware that it could do that!

  • http://twitter.com/azmushko Alex Zmushka

    well… why not if someone has enough free time? ;)

  • Harold Gardner

    I had no idea that much time was getting wasted…

  • terrinakamura

    I didn’t realize Nokia had such a presence in mobile gaming. As far as the statistic of 200 million minutes a day — I guess since I’m not a traditional gamer, it’s difficult for me to fathom. Thanks for the interesting post.

  • http://twitter.com/RadeBigMan Rade

    cool games!

  • Pauli

    Sorry, only 7 of these were new to me.. :)

  • http://twitter.com/UrServiceCoach Dan Murray

    Wow…. a lot has changed…quickly.

  • http://twitter.com/CogentCoach Michael Nelson

    hard to believe how far games have come!

  • http://jeffmayenrik.com/ Jeff Mayernik

    I used to play Snake. Now I restrict myself to Words with Friends

  • http://www.facebook.com/JohnnaCrider Johnna Crider

    I’ve never owned a Nokia but have wanted one.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=663918885 Jeff Langfels

    Fun but wastes a lot of time. Used to play Texas Hold’em relentlessly 6 or 7 years ago on a flip phone.

  • http://twitter.com/barbecuecaterer Philip Lee Hewitson

    I remember the old games so rubbish ! this looks really good though

  • http://twitter.com/davebellous dave bellous

    I still remember when the n-gage blew my mind with possibilities. Today I spend more time gaming on a mobile device than a console, and so do my kids (yeah – i’m that old).

  • http://twitter.com/HeinzDobernig Heinz Dobernig

    My favorite game was angry birds