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Quack Quack Attack: PEGG Blaster launches on iOS and Android today

Egg-flinging pachinko chaos is live on mobile, and PEGG Blaster backs the joke up with squads, upgrades, and PvP.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Quack Quack Attack: PEGG Blaster launches on iOS and Android today
Source: pocketgamer.com

Quack Quack Attack: PEGG Blaster landed on iOS and Android with a pitch that is impossible to mistake for anything else: fling eggs, bounce them across the screen, and clear waves of enemies with slingshot-style shots. The closed beta is over, and the launch leans hard on the same instantly readable loop, but now it arrives wrapped in progression, modes, and enough structure to keep the novelty from evaporating after the first few runs.

The core setup stays delightfully simple. One shot can ricochet into a chain of hits, turning each stage into a small puzzle about angles, timing, and whether you can turn a clean throw into a screen-wide wipeout. That arcade-first feel is the hook, but PEGG Blaster clearly wants more than a one-note gag, especially now that the game is out in full release rather than sitting behind beta doors.

There is real squad-building under the rubber-duck absurdity. The roster includes around 50 bird heroes split across six classes, and each run lets you pick five, which immediately pushes the game beyond a basic touch-and-fire puzzler. Players can level characters, evolve them, and layer in card-based abilities and gear, while AFK collection systems keep resources flowing even when the app is closed. That mix gives the launch a stronger long-tail grind than its name would suggest.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The mode list also gives players different ways to spend time. Tower of Purgatory is built for anyone looking for a harsher climb, Fishing Grounds slows things down, and Starry Expedition adds PvP against other flocks. HAOPLAY, the publisher behind the release, said it was founded in 2019 and now has offices in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei, Seoul, and Los Angeles, a footprint that matches the game’s broader live-service ambitions.

The mobile listings add a few more details to the launch picture. The App Store identifies the game as Quack Quack Attack by HaoPlay Limited, marks it as free with in-app purchases, and gives it a 13+ age rating. The English listing frames the story around a duck waking on a mysterious ark in the ocean, while the Portuguese listing names Captain Duck and 50+ heroes. Pre-registration had already promised in-game resources and the A-class hero Cutie Duck, and the finished release now has to turn that odd little promise into repeat play, one ricocheting egg at a time.

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