(60,236 Games)
Who was sure that the classic and famous Adobe Flash games had disappeared definitively? Who could have thought that they would return? Well, they are back and in great style in the new version of nicoo. Now you can play them on your computer, with all the gameplay and security, thanks to the Ruffle emulator, which is accepted and functions in all major web browsers, including Chrome, Edge, Safari, and Firefox.We have gathered on this page the largest collection of free flash games from all over the world, an incredible total of 50,000 games. Some of these games were even developed by the team that is part of the new nicoo project. As far as we know, there is no other website in the world that offers the quantity of games that we currently provide for our visitors. All of these games are published following publication rules, with the proper links and references to the authors kept intact within the SWF files themselves, in order to preserve the copyrights of the creators. This has been a constant practice for approximately 20 years, during the dominance of flash games on the web, until these games became unavailable to the common user in the most popular browsers.In this first version of the site, which will undergo significant evolution over the next two years, we decided to create this collection of flash games in the style of the old FRIV, which achieved huge success on a global scale.But what was the Flash Player after all? And why did it disappear almost suddenly, even when it was still widely used? The revolutionary Adobe Flash Player was released by the renowned Macromedia in 1996 and later acquired by Adobe. It had remarkable growth and quickly became a global success. Around 80% of websites worldwide contained flash content. The success was such that flash games also began to be produced on a large scale all over the planet.Suddenly and unexpectedly, Adobe announced the discontinuation of support for Flash and, consequently, the companies that owned the major web browsers, including Google, Apple, Facebook, and Microsoft, coordinately cited security reasons to prohibit the use of Flash in their browsers, discontinuing it definitively.With the release of the licensed Ruffle emulator, security is no longer a concern for users, and all security-related issues are now handled by the emulator, in conjunction with content distributors. This ensures that visitors can enjoy the guaranteed entertainment of flash games with total security and tranquility. Continue reading »
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