Pie Guy shows off the power of iPhone web apps
Neven Mrgan, a developer at Panic, as well as the co-creator of the popular Birdfeed Twitter client, has just released a fascinating new iPhone game. It's called Pie Guy, and the gameplay is reminiscent of classic Pac Mac games. You won't find Pie Guy in the App Store, though, because it's a web app. You can even add it to your home screen and play it offline. The game is fairly fun, but the more exciting part is what it suggests about the future of web apps on the iPhone.
All those problems with the App Store approval process don't apply to web apps, so it's worth seeing how far developers can push web apps. They're not an alternative to every iPhone app, as John Gruber points out at Daring Fireball, because web apps don't have access to a lot of the iPhone's hardware functions (accelerometer, camera, etc.).
On top of that, the Cocoa Touch framework makes native apps not only faster than web apps, but easier to write. Despite all that, Pie Guy makes a good case for expanding our ideas of what a web app can be.
I don't know if this is a labor of love or merely the brainchild of four very gifted games designers, but Level Up is a really weird mash-up of gaming elements that you have probably never seen in a Flash game before.
Let's start with the premise itself: Groundhog Day meets Memento. The game experience revolves around 'days': you explore the world and the clock slowly ticks towards the evening. You bounce around picking up gems and talking to the denizens of 'Level Upland'. Eventually you feel tired and head back to ...
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Alex Zizzo said 5:04PM on 11-26-2009
Won't this be obsolete when iPhones (WebOS, Android, etc as well) get Flash support? (If that ever happens...)
Guess its pretty cool someones working something out in the meantime though.
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Ben said 5:11PM on 11-26-2009
A better question is, won't this make Flash obsolete?
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sRc said 10:08PM on 11-26-2009
why do I feel like I've stepped into a time warp to back when the iPhone first launched?
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Justin Shaw said 12:46PM on 11-27-2009
this reminds me of what intrigues me about android and its eventual merge with chrome os, which is designed to work specifically with web applications. web applications are an important part of the future for mobile devices of many kinds
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