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You Have To Burn The Rope and more classic Flash games are playable in your browser againThe clue’s in the name
The clue’s in the name

Open-source Flash Player emulatorRufflehas supported older versions of the Flash programming language, ActionScript, for a while but was unable to play stuff games made in ActionScript 3. Ruffle is a nice emulator because websites can embed it, meaning folks can just click on a link and start playing. Some other Flash emulators require installing a browser plugin. Now, Ruffle is finally introducing partial AS3 support, which will hopefully make many more ‘newer’ Flash games and things easy to see again.
Perhaps most notable is You Have To Burn The Rope, a short and silly game whose title explains everything. The Old Guard declared itone of RPS’s favourite games of 2008and I was still pleased revisiting it today.Click hereand you can play the post-Portal platformer within seconds, and finish it within minutes.
ou Have to Burn the Rope complete playthroughBecause UGH I know some people won’t go see it if I don’t show themWatch on YouTube
ou Have to Burn the Rope complete playthrough

You can alsoplay Wonderputt, an imaginative minigolf game which still delights.Piece-morphing jigsaw puzzle Not To Scaleis playable too.Avoid ‘em up Morphis there too (and if you like that, do check outDisc Room, whichis now on Game Pass). Andten-second Bible ‘em up Run, Jesus Run!kinda works, one visual glitch aside.
Adobeofficially killed Flash in January 2021. Ahead of that (and after) many projects sprung up to preserve Flash history through archiving and emulating. Some folks have converted their Flash work to HTML5, but relying on people doing that would see a huge amount get lost (who has the time? who even has the source files?). Archival and emulation projects includeFlashpoint, theFlash Game Archive, andInternet Archive’s Flash library(which also uses Ruffle). Classic webtoon Homestar Runnerswitched to Ruffletoo. Plus sites like Newground are still around, you know, and people are still making new Flash games.
Wondrous Wonderputt

Flash games were a huge step towards indie games as we now know them, and a lot of Internet culture was built upon Flash cartoons. I’m glad to see it preserved, not just as files in some archive but still watchable and playable.
I do think abolishing the barrier to entry of installing a plugin is good when preserving Flash games. Yeah, technically back in the day you did need to install Flash at some point, but absolutely everyone had Flash so you could send links to games and they’d be able to instantly start, no problem. It’s not the same when you need to manually install Lightspark or Newgrounds Player in the modern age. I’m glad to see Ruffle add AS3 support and expand that seamless experience.
Flash could be a huge pain in the bum but I’m not sure the Internet has become a better place since its death. Websites manage to be plenty annoying with HTML. On balance, animated Flash ads might be less annoying than web pages jumping around illegibly as they load a million banner ads and notification popups and… they don’t even let you punch a monkey anymore.