Skip to main content

Challenge your friends within Facebook Messenger with Instant Games

how to start secret conversation facebook messenger feat
If competition is at the heart of all your friendships, then Facebook Messenger might soon become your favorite battleground. The popular messaging app is getting ready to launch an “Instant Games” platform that will allow you to challenge your friends to a number of lightweight games, like Shuffle Cats Mini (a New Zealand game made by King.com). And it’s not just the Candy Crush game maker that is getting in on the action — other major developers seem to be making preparations to enter the Messenger space as well.

No longer will you have to open up a separate app in order to entertain yourself with arcade antics — now you can stay within Facebook Messenger and use it, as TechCrunch notes, “as a portal to mobile web apps,” thereby driving Messenger engagement. Already, The Information reports that Facebook is privately testing Instant Games, though it only appears to work for users in some countries. For example, while Shuffle Cats Mini is available for New Zealanders, American players get an error message when they attempt to play on mobile.

But that probably won’t be the case for long. As VentureBeat previously reported, a new startup called Big Viking recently raised over $20 million to develop “HTML5 instant games.” What are HTML5 instant games, you ask? As Big Viking CEO Albert Lai told TechCrunch in an interview today that covered the company’s plans, “HTML5 is a technology that basically allows us to embed our games into anything and everything as well as inside messenger platforms with bots. In any messenger platform, [people] can play our game. This completely shifts the power in the distribution system. Anywhere there’s a messenger we can deliver our games instantaneously.”

That certainly sounds like something Facebook and its Instant Games could use.

Of course, this is by no means Facebook’s first entrance into the gaming world, though it does represent one of its largest mobile pushes. Last week, the social media giant unveiled Facebook Gameroom, a gaming platform meant for desktop PCs.

So if you’re a gaming enthusiast, get ready for the next phase of Facebook. It looks like you’ll be playing plenty.

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
This mobile fitness game will turn your daily walk into an RPG
Run Legends key art shows runners running towards monsters.

If you have a hard time finding the motivation to exercise, you might want to keep your eye on upcoming mobile game Run Legends. The project turns your daily walk into a series of RPG battles that you can play without even looking at your phone screen.

Run Legends Open Beta Trailer | iOS and Android Fitness Battle Game

Read more
End your year on a charming note with this adorable Zelda-like game
An alligator tightrope walks on telephone lines in Lil Gator Game.

After a long 12 months, 2022 is almost over.  It's been a busy year on the gaming side, with demanding games like Elden Ring and God of War Ragnarok eating up hundreds of hours. If you're looking for a quick low-stakes come-down before the ball drops, Lil Gator Game is the perfect adventure for your New Year's weekend.

Lil Gator Game - Launch Trailer - Nintendo Switch

Read more
Your 2021 Samsung TV may get Xbox Game Pass and more game apps next week
A tv shows the new Xbox Game Pass that comes to Samsung Gaming Hub soon.

Samsung is expanding its Gaming Hub by adding the cloud-based streaming app to some 2021 smart TV models starting next week. The service itself is getting more enticing, as the app will soon support 4K cloud game streaming at 60 frames per second (fps) on select games via Nvidia GeForce Now.

Samsung Gaming Hub launched this summer on the company's line of 2022 smart TVs. At launch, the service allowed TV owners to stream games on their TV through cloud services like Xbox Game Pass and Amazon Luna. With its latest update, Samsung has made it clear that the service is only growing as it looks to retroactively put it in front of even more smart TV users.

Read more