PEGG Blaster opens pre-registration with deep pachinko battles on mobile
A duck-led pachinko RPG is selling itself on more than a joke name, with 50 birds, PvP, and pre-reg rewards that could matter fast.

Quack Quack Attack: PEGG Blaster is not just a punchline with feathers. It opened pre-registration on iOS and Android with a pitch that mixes pachinko-style ricochet combat, squad building, and enough progression systems to look closer to a strategy RPG than a quick gimmick.
The core loop is simple to grasp and easy to picture: players fire eggs down a board, bounce shots off obstacles, and try to chain enemy clears in one cascading run. The game casts players as Captain Quack, a duck leading a magical ark through an ocean overrun by monsters, and that setup keeps the tone light even as the systems underneath start stacking up. The official pre-registration push leans hard into that contradiction with lines like “Swipe to Strike, Unfurl the Quack!” and “Pre-register now for the ultimate ricochet RPG!”, while the page also describes it as “Addictive Ricochet: Clear the screen in one hit and smash your worries away!”
The deeper signal is in the team design. Each stage uses five birds, and the roster runs to 50 characters across six classes: Celestial, Cold, Combo, Fire, Lightning and Strike. That is the sort of structure that usually separates a passing mobile puzzler from something built for long-term optimization. Stat upgrades, evolutions, card-based ability tweaks and gear crafting all point in the same direction. If the board play draws you in, the buildcraft is where the game appears to want to hold you.
That ambition carries into the modes. Purgatory Tower is framed as the challenge ladder, Fishing Ground as a more relaxed side activity, and Starry Expedition as the PvP space for players who want to measure a duck squad against other people’s setups. Early pre-registration rewards also look tuned for retention: Mystery Eggs, Gold and, eventually, an A-Class Hero named Cutie Duck. For players who care about early account growth, that reward ladder could be worth locking in before launch.
The publisher behind it gives the project a bit more weight. HAOPLAY says it was founded in 2019 and now has offices in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei, Seoul and Los Angeles, with a broader catalog that already includes Blue Protocol: Star Resonance, Girls’ Frontline 2: Exilium and Metal Slug: Awakening. In other words, Quack Quack Attack is arriving from a team that knows how to ship mobile games at scale, and its blend of squad depth, reward structure and competitive modes suggests this one is aiming for staying power, not just a clever title.
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