Difference between revisions of "Ruffle"

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(Overview)
(Tags: Mobile edit, Mobile web edit)
(Tags: Mobile edit, Mobile web edit)
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==Overview==
 
==Overview==
As of October 2022, Ruffle primarily supports older Flash content while also supporting some AS3 contents, which use ActionScript 1.0 and 2.0 with 90% of the language and 73% of the API implemented. ActionScript 3.0 support is at 60% of the language and 50% of the API. Bleeping Computer reported that all the SWF games they tried in February 2021 "worked flawlessly."
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As of March 2023, Ruffle primarily supports older Flash content while also supporting some AS3 contents, which use ActionScript 1.0 and 2.0 with 90% of the language and 73% of the API implemented. ActionScript 3.0 support is at 60% of the language and 50% of the API. Bleeping Computer reported that all the SWF games they tried in February 2021 "worked flawlessly."

Revision as of 07:16, 7 March 2023

Ruffle
Ruffle vector logo.svg.png
Developer(s) Mike Welsh
kmeisthax
Nathan Adams
Callum Thomson
relrelb
Repository Contributors
Latest version N/A
Active Yes
Platform(s) Windows
Linux
macOS
HTML5
Emulates Adobe Flash
Website ruffle.rs/
Support ($) Open Collective
Programmed in Rust
License MIT and Apache 2.0 (dual-licensed)
Source code GitHub

Ruffle is an experimental, free and open-source Adobe Flash emulator written in Rust, available under either the Apache 2.0 or MIT licenses. It's available either as a desktop player or as a HTML5 web embed using JavaScript/TypeScript and WebAssembly, and even though Ruffle is still a work-in-progress the HTML5 version in particular has already seen widespread adoption across various sites that depend heavily on Flash content, including such famous examples as Newgrounds and Homestar Runner.

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Overview

As of March 2023, Ruffle primarily supports older Flash content while also supporting some AS3 contents, which use ActionScript 1.0 and 2.0 with 90% of the language and 73% of the API implemented. ActionScript 3.0 support is at 60% of the language and 50% of the API. Bleeping Computer reported that all the SWF games they tried in February 2021 "worked flawlessly."