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There is a trove of flash animation that is completely lost to history

From Homestar Runner to Salad fingers to badgers, stick figure battles, and the End of Ze World, this — dare I call it an artform? — was a cultural touchstone for a generation.

Flash made vector animation available to the masses, and internet distribution of the relatively small video files was a piece of cake. With the filetype now essentially deprecated, the creators gone on to bigger and better things, the distribution sites shut down, it is a dead form. Most of it will be lost forever, although there may be someone archiving some of it for posterity.

PraiseTheSoup ,

I’ve spent a lot of time looking for old stuff from Stick Figure Death Theatre to no avail. It really is quite sad.

arefx ,

Salad fingers is still coming put with new ones lol

Rai ,

hBomberGuy did a long video on Newgrounds! It’s amazing, but I think it might only be on his Patreon.

amio ,

A lot of it was lightweight enough that archival sites etc might not have specifically ruled them out, aside from specific efforts to preserve Flash material. There are also modded versions of Flash Player and emulators that can still play SWFs, and FLV remains supported fairly commonly.

Masta_Chief , (edited )

Guys, homestarrunner literally works again thanks to something called the Ruffle Project (just from reading the website). Enjoy the vector graphics and Easter eggs again

thevoidzero ,

Yeah it is sad that we don’t have flash. But today I saw there’s a program Ruffle (written in Rust) that can run flash, and add support to browser through extensions or something.

Willdrick ,

Theres are some pretty massive archives already, including Flashpoint

rikudou ,

Salad Fingers is on YouTube and it’s as creepy as ever. Maybe creepier as I get older.

667 ,
@667@lemmy.radio avatar

Might I enquire about your spooooons?

Lost_My_Mind ,

They’re a pleasure for the TIPS!

dragontamer ,

Flash still got it good.

Consider the entire generation of 1970s and 1980s Betamax footage that is basically lost today.

When format wars snap to one side: VHS vs Betamax, HD-DVD vs BluRay, Flash vs HTML5, QuickTime vs DivX… The losing side basically loses a ton of footage.

For the most part, we know how to play Flash right now and mostly how to upconvert it or otherwise archive it. That’s not true of all formats.

aeronmelon ,

A lot of the meme-tier flash from that period has been archived on dagobah.net.

SteveFromMySpace ,

HSR has been preserved don’t worry!

Frozyre ,

Nah, they're still out there in other forms. Some other people, have archived the SWF files (like StickDeath's) on Internet Archive.

I just miss going to the actual sites to view them in. I was going to say that Joe Cartoon was the last beacon of that but if you go there, it's just YT videos all decorated around the site's design. It's not the same.

henfredemars ,

There are in-browser emulators written in JavaScript. Like any old content, I’m more worried about sources going down rather than not being able to run the flash.

Aatube ,

The biggest one (also adopted by the wayback machine) is actually written in Rust (compiled to WASM).

ThePantser ,
@ThePantser@lemmy.world avatar

I miss Romp.com it was all adult themed videos.

W_itjust_works ,

Is the tech no longer possible? I have a feeling of no current browser support and security issues, but could one just have a private server for hobbyists?

W_itjust_works ,
pivot_root ,

Ruffle is a Rust-based implementation of a SWF player. It’s not 100% compatible, but it has decent AVM1 (ActionScript 1/2) and AVM2 (ActionScript 3) support already.

It also can be compiled to WebAssembly, making it possible to run Flash in the browser again.

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