At a time when the gaming industry is enjoying a glut of remakes and remasters,like the recently-announcedThe Last of Usremake, it might sometimes feel like the things that consumers actually want get a little lost in the excitement. Thankfully, the people have spoken, and what they want is moreFlappy Bird. Well, one person at least.

It might feel a little odd to be thinking aboutFlappy Birdhere in 2021, but it’s hard to deny the impact of 2014’s bizarrely popular mobile game.The myriadFlappy Birdclones speak for themselves, and rumor had it that at its peak it was raking in $50,000 a day on the App Store, before being taken down by its own developer.

RELATED:‘Flappy Bird’ Was The Most Searched For Game of 2014

One person hasn’t forgotten about the game, and that is Butterfly Network developer Neil Sardesai. Sardesai, who enjoys tinkering with MacOS and its Appkit on the side of his usual job as an iOS engineer, recently took to Twitter to showcase how he’d managed to fit aFlappy Birddeveloped with PlayCanvas into a single push notification, allowing the user to play it entirely inside the notification itself.

This isn’t the first time Sardesai has bent the MacOS UI to his will, either: previous projects of his include a dinosaur-themed infinite runner that sits in the menu bar anda version ofSnakeutilizing the switches used to toggle options on and off. His website also features icon packs and small but charming UI add-ons for Mac and iPhone.

This resurrection ofFlappy Birdwas met with general positivity, especially consideringthe original developer’s movement onward to pastures new,though one Twitter user did semi-jokingly comment, “Did you just reinvent flash banner adverts for native desktops?”

Luckily for them, however, Sardesai is keeping his little project to himself for now. It’s not known yet what his next undertaking is going to be, but if it turns out to bepossible to playDoomin a notification too, everyone will know who to thank.