"'Angry Birds' Flies Toward The Game Board"

MELISSA BLOCK, Host:

From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Melissa Block.

MICHELE NORRIS, Host:

Many of you may know this tune.

(SOUNDBITE OF GAME, "ANGRY BIRDS")

NORRIS: Gigi Douban reports.

GIGI DOUBAN: Whenever Chris Clark fires up his iPhone or iPad, he's on autopilot. His fingers invariably go to the same place, to the game folder containing the "Angry Birds" app.

(SOUNDBITE OF GAME, "ANGRY BIRDS")

DOUBAN: Clark, an industrial electronics repairman from Birmingham, Alabama, says he plays "Angry Birds" during downtime at work, on the sofa, waiting in line and, well, just about anytime he can. In other words, he's addicted.

CHRIS CLARK: You keep retrying the harder levels until you get it, and then you're like, OK, next. Next. Come on. Come on. And you just keep going, and you stop when somebody yells, dinner, or it's time to go to work.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

DOUBAN: Part of what makes it so addictive, Clark says, is that it's easy. You basically hurl birds through a slingshot at a castle. Inside the castle are these ugly green pigs.

(SOUNDBITE OF GAME, "ANGRY BIRDS")

DOUBAN: They stole the birds' eggs. So the object of the game is revenge. That's something a lot of people can relish in, but so is the simple pleasure of breaking things.

(SOUNDBITE OF GAME, "ANGRY BIRDS")

DOUBAN: Mattel knows this. Just ask Raymond Adler, the company's marketing manager for games and puzzles.

RAYMOND ADLER: People love building things so that they can go and knock them down.

DOUBAN: So Mattel is putting the finishing touches on an "Angry Birds" board game due to hit store shelves in May. It'll sell for about $15.

ADLER: This is sort of our first venture into bringing things from the digital space into the physical space.

DOUBAN: Adler says Mattel still sells tons of board games, but there's a lot more competition out there. Games played on computers, mobile devices and all sorts of gadgets take away market share from Mattel.

ADLER: Some of the ways that we're trying to combat that is exactly with things like "Angry Birds."

DOUBAN: True to the digital game, there will be a slingshot.

(SOUNDBITE OF GAME, "ANGRY BIRDS")

DOUBAN: Only in the board game version, and this may come as a disappointment to some, the birds will not come apart and explode on impact with the castle, which players build out of blocks.

ADLER: No. The birds stay in one piece so that you can play over and over again.

DOUBAN: And Mattel hopes people do. The company wouldn't say how much it invested in the "Angry Birds" board game, but analysts say it can't be much. After all, Rovio, the company that developed the "Angry Birds" app, pretty much provided the framework.

PAUL SWINAND: They don't have to go out and develop a whole lot of intellectual property to create a new board game.

DOUBAN: That's Paul Swinand, an analyst with Morningstar.

SWINAND: If it's not a success, it's not going to be a black eye or probably even a loss for them because they probably have very good margins on it.

DOUBAN: Still, even Adler says it's pretty unlikely that the "Angry Birds" board game will ever outsell toys like Barbies and Matchbox cars. But, Adler says, you just never know, and as big as "Angry Birds" is, he says, it's definitely a risk worth taking.

(SOUNDBITE OF GAME, "ANGRY BIRDS")

DOUBAN: For NPR News, I'm Gigi Douban in Birmingham, Alabama.