WebGL: Play Angry Birds For Free

By | May 12, 2011


WebGL: Play Angry Birds For Free

With the worldwide launch of Google Chrome Store, it was also revealed that the popular Angry Birds game has been included there for free and can be played anytime, all the time.

The better news is that Google Chrome is not a necessity. As long as your web browser supports hardware accelerated WebGL or Canvas, you shouldn’t experience any issues.

So, what are you waiting for? Jut click the following link and enjoy free gaming.


About (Author Profile)


Vygantas is a former web designer whose projects are used by companies such as AMD, NVIDIA and departed Westood Studios. Being passionate about software, Vygantas began his journalism career back in 2007 when he founded FavBrowser.com. Having said that, he is also an adrenaline junkie who enjoys good books, fitness activities and Forex trading.

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  1. Angry Birds kostenlos im Chrome App-Store « Browser Fuchs | May 12, 2011
  1. Opera & IE fanboy says:

    WebGL has security issues like WebSockets!! :(

  2. Opera & IE fanboy says:

    Opera sucked here, IE9 rocks!! it is very smooth here.

    • Anonymous says:

      Hardware accelerated Opera runs this really nicely (even the HD one), smooth as silk on my very mediocre laptop.

      http://labs.opera.com/news/2011/02/28/

      • Opera & IE fanboy says:

        Cool, I’m waiting the final release. But I want to use Canvas version of this game not WebGL. WebGL has some security issue. Is it possible to disable WebGL in browser ?

      • Opera & IE fanboy says:

        Cool, I’m waiting the final release. But I want to use Canvas version of this game not WebGL. WebGL has some security issue. Is it possible to disable WebGL in browser ?

        • Anonymous says:

          You should stop listening to that clueless cretin Dan Goodin from The Register. He writes nothing but sensational gutter reporting type stories.

          WebGL is perfectly safe, the “expert” than claimed this has no specific knowledge of any vulnerability, just that because it talks to more of your system (i.e. the video drivers), it MAY (and that’s the important point), open up some holes that an otherwise sandboxed browser won’t suffer from.

          It’s all theoretical scaremongering, with no basis at all.

          It’s a shame idiots like Dan Goodin can’t see this and lack basic technical skills to understand these things.