The new FlappyBird.org webpage doesn’t mention any of those crypto links publicly. But web developer and cybersecurity researcher Varun Biniwale found quite a few such references while digging into the site’s hidden, unlinked content. That includes a (now-deleted, but archived) page promising the new Flappy Bird will "fly higher than ever on Solana as it soars into Web 3.0.
Biniwale’s discoveries also include a rough WebGL version of the game, which has references to a $FLAP Token that can be stored on a linked crypto wallet through the TON Network.
They had Web3 shit prepared but hid then removed it. I wonder if they were smart enough to realize it would be horribly received and decided to pivot to a more normal game (i.e. stuffed with regular microtransactions).
First opsec tip: don’t use yourself on the online face swap ai, for neither the source picture nor the target video.