Ketchapp

Ketchapp
Private
Industry Mobile games
Founded 2014
Headquarters Paris, France[1]
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Antoine Morcos (CEO)
Michel Morcos (Chairman)
Products Video games
Website www.ketchappstudio.com

Ketchapp is a mobile game publishing company based in Paris, France that develops iOS and Android games. The company first came into the public eye in 2014 through its port of the open-source game 2048. Following that game's success, Ketchapp developed several games such as Circle, Don't Touch the Spikes and ZigZag. Many of Ketchapp's games are unlicensed variations of popular casual games by other developers.

History

Ketchapp was founded on January 28, 2014 by Antoine and Michel Morcos.[2]

In 2014, the company cloned Gabriele Cirulli's open-source puzzle game 2048 and published it as an app, with advertising.[3] It eventually reached the top of iOS App Store.[4] Ketchapp became successful by adapting ideas from other popular apps,[5] with many of its releases being variations on existing games, such as reworking the popular 2013 game Flappy Bird as "'Run Bird Run.[5] The company released the scrolling reaction game ZigZag in 2015,[6] which was praised for not being a clone of an existing game.[5]

Ketchapp encourages developers to submit games to them for possible release. In April 2015, developers Matt Akins and Mudloop both accused Ketchapp of publishing versions of games that had been submitted to Ketchapp and rejected, without credit and under similar but different titles - Akins Rotable being similar to Ketchapp's Circle Pong, and Mudloop's Zig Zag Boom resembling ZigZag.[7] Mudloop later stated that they had learned that their submission of Zig Zag Boom to Ketchapp post-dated Ketchapp having a working version of ZigZag.[8] The developer of App Cow's Circle Pong claimed to have built it as a clone of Pongo Pongo, a game which pre-dated Matt Akins' submission of Rotable to Ketchapp.[8]

Other games by Ketchapp include Jelly Jump,[9] Don't Touch the Spikes[10] and The Tower.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.