Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Homestar and Strongbad on the woes of Flash’s demise

Add as a preferred source on Google

The demise of Adobe’s long-running plugin and creative tool, Flash, has been hailed as imminent from as far back as most of us can remember. Despite that view, and the likes of Apple dropping it from its smartphones years ago, Flash has soldiered on in a select few places, continuing to support the creation of games and animation despite more contemporary alternatives. However, with recent security holes revealed after the Hacking Team hacking, it’s end now seems closer than ever.

That’s put the willies in some of its longest-running fans. Even fans who have been absent for some time while their creators worked on other projects, like Homestar Runner and Strongbad, two characters that wouldn’t even be alive if it wasn’t for Flash. Now they’re going to have to move over to HTML5 and that could take some time.

Recommended Videos

Related: Enough is enough: Mozilla blocks Flash in Firefox until Adobe fixes security holes

Fortunately, Strongbad claims that with his old pal F-Sack, he’s managed to collect enough motion tweens to keep the series running until that time, but it could be touch and go for a while.

While the creation of the animations might now require different tools, we can all watch them far more easily now on YouTube, which means that all of the classics, as well as any new creations will be safe — even if not all of the Easter Eggs may work as intended.

Of course HomeStar and Strongbad aren’t the only two characters that Flash gave us over the years. Alien Hominid helped start the game-making careers of Tom Fulp and his fellow Newground alumni with their Behemoth company. There was Brackenwood and Bitey, not to mention the ever-popular Madness series of games and short films.

What are some of your most memorable Flash cartoons and games?

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
Asus puts the outrageous dual-screen ROG Zephyrus Duo on the shelf at an eye-watering price
The ROG Zephyrus Duo isn't just a gaming laptop with two screens, it's the company’s most serious attempt yet to add more ambition to a "portable workstation" that’s capable of gaming.
Asus dual-screen laptop America.

Asus has decided that one screen isn’t simply enough on a laptop. The ROG Zephyrus Duo has returned to the market with two screens, with pre-orders now live for what the company is calling the world’s first 16-inch dual-screen gaming laptop.

Starting at $4,499.99 and going up to $5,499.99 for the top configuration, this is undoubtedly a machine that is built for people measuring their laptops with ambition, either for innovation or the desire to game on a dual-screen laptop. 

Read more
Nvidia quietly released a new version of GeForce RTX 5070 GPU inside a driver blog post
And more VRAM doesn't always mean more performance, and the pricing could make the RTX 5070 Ti a better value depending on final configurations.
The RTX 5070 in a graphic.

Nvidia just announced a new GPU variant in the weirdest way possible: buried it in a game driver update blog post. 

Alongside the release of its Game Ready 596.36 WHQL driver, the company also confirmed the launch of a 12GB GDDR7 configuration of the GeForce RTX 5070 laptop GPU. 

Read more
Dell 34 Plus USB-C monitor review: An ultrawide beauty with surprises you’ll love
Dell's curved monitor blends practical minimalism with a few neat perks of its own.
Dell 34 Plus USB-C Monitor - S3425DW

Quick Take

I’ve grown deeply suspicious of any monitor that calls itself a “productivity display.” They're not bad, per se. The real reason is that most of them are boring, and sluggish at adopting modern standards. Chunky black bezels, boring grey-on-grey corporate look that screams “I belong in a 2014 cubicle,” and a dull desk presence. I’ve never wanted any of them sitting on my workstation. So when I unboxed the Dell 34 Plus USB-C monitor (SKU is S3425DW), I was bracing for the usual disappointment. It was in for a surprise.

Read more