Angry Birds Theme Park created
Everyone knows that Angry Birds has become one of the most popular mobile apps in the history of mobile apps. People play the game for hours on end, hate themselves for doing it — and end up getting addicted to it. No wonder, it has made millionaires of its makers at the Finnish company Rovio.
It is also no secret that Rovio plans to build Angry Birds theme park. It is a project so big that it would definitely take a while for Rovio to turn it into reality. Nevertheless, Chinese people have thought of something clever. They turned an ordinary recreational park in Changsa, China into an Angry Birds park.
Yes, that’s right. Having opened last Thursday, the Window of the World theme park in Changsa has created the full Angry Birds experience, allowing players to shoot Angry Birds toys at green piggy balloons placed around a toy brick fortress.
“This [Angry Birds park] serves as a method for people to purge themselves and to gain happiness,” a park official told Chinese gaming website Gamersky.com.
The Window of the World theme is Changsa’s major recreational attraction and features replicas of famous landmarks.
The Angry Birds playground is located within the park’s American Zone, next to a scaled-down replica of Mount Rushmore. The park will feature Angry Birds until the end of September, according to Park’s Marketing Manager Ye Xiumei.
However, the attraction is believed to have been built without game creator Rovio’s approval so the creators of Angry Birds theme park could also face a lawsuit.
Having said that, Rovio also has high ambitions for the Chinese markets and wouldn’t really like to create an unpleasant experience for itself and the fans of Angry birds in China, by taking any legal actions.
Infact, Rovio takes pride in being one of the top three most copied brands in China and aims to translate that popularity into sales in the Chinese markets, according to a pcworld report.
Infact, Rovio takes pride in being one of the top three most copied brands in China and aims to translate that popularity into sales in the Chinese markets, according to a pcworld report.