| Removed 3 days ago | from Play Store |
|---|---|
| 5+ | Installs 🔒 More accurate value in Pro |
| 16 days | Age |
| 16 days ago | Updated |
| March 2, 2026 | Release date |
| 5Mb | Size |
Welcome to Feathered Hardware — a compact, concept-driven knowledge game built around speed, focus, and visual recognition.
You are greeted by a friendly chicken engineer wearing small round glasses and holding a screwdriver. This character becomes your guide into a playful technical environment where learning English vocabulary meets clear, structured gameplay. Around you are familiar computer elements: a motherboard, a processor, a mouse — all presented as visual challenges.
The core idea of Feathered Hardware is simple and precise. In each round, the player sees an image of a computer-related object and three possible answers in English. Only one option is correct.
Each round lasts 15 seconds. Within this time, the player must select one of the three options and press the “Submit” button to confirm the choice. The game does not proceed automatically without confirmation — decision-making is always intentional.
After submission, the game immediately reacts to the answer. A correct choice triggers a green screen flash for one second, followed by the next round. An incorrect choice triggers a red flash, and the game also continues automatically.
A full session consists of 20 rounds. Once the final round is completed, the player receives a clear result displayed as “x/20”, where x represents the number of correct answers.
If the current result exceeds previous attempts, it is saved in the Records list. The Records screen displays the top five best results, allowing players to track improvement over time.
The game also respects user focus. When the app is minimized or the player switches to another application, the session is automatically paused and a pause window appears. Upon returning, the player must close the pause window to continue the game.
Feathered Hardware is designed as a clean concept experience: fast rounds, clear rules, no distractions — just visual learning, reaction, and progress.
