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Help the bartender mix drinks in the right ratios for Miguel! Choose from a shelf full of different drinks that range from Vodka, Whiskey, Vermouth, Tripple-Sec, Gin etc. and mix them together for the ultimate drink for a good night out. Add ice or lemon to the drinks to give it that extra kick but be careful, mixing the drinks in the wrong amounts or simply mixing the wrong drinks could end in in the worst of ways! No bartending school required!
First you must add your choice of spirit. Maybe you will choose Kahula, Vermouth, or even Tequila? Next, you can add an accompanying juice such as orange, lemon, and cranberry. Will you add some ice to cool your drink or maybe a lemon to add a little sourness? Shake your drink and serve your concoction to Miguel. Will he like your cocktail or will it send him to an early grave? Can you create the right mix and serve the perfect drink?
Bartender The Right Mix is a Flash game that you can now play without the discontinued plugin, thanks to Ruffle.
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The world has changed drastically since then, and now Flash games are a dying breed - not least because most modern browsers no longer support them. It's not been available on mobile for eight years since Android dropped it in its 4.1 release.
But not all hope is lost. Preservation efforts for Flash games are well underway, and web gaming platform Poki is significantly stepping up its own efforts by partnering with Nitrome, now a respected mobile studio, and adding 100 of the developer's old Flash titles to the platform.
To find out more about why it's preserving these games, we spoke with Poki co-founder Michiel van Amerongen and other members of the team - as well as Nitrome's Mat Annal - about the technical challenges of saving these games and why it's good business for everyone involved.
PocketGamer.biz: We last spoke with you around four years ago following the launch of Color Switch on your platform. How has Poki grown and changed over those four years?
Michiel van Amerongen: 2012 - 2024 was a challenging time for web games. The app stores had exploded, Flash was on its way out, but its successor HTML5 was still a niche game development technology.