
By 2015, Flash Player has become a suitable alternative to Shockwave Player, with its 3D rendering capabilities and object-oriented programming language. Īs of July 2011, a survey found that Flash Player had 99% market penetration in desktop browsers in "mature markets" (United States, Canada, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand), while Shockwave Player claimed only 41% in these markets. Hundreds of free online video games were developed using Shockwave, and published on websites such as Miniclip and. Shockwave Player supported raster graphics, basic vector graphics, 3D graphics, digital audio, and an embedded scripting language called Lingo. Shockwave Player ran DCR files published by the Adobe Director environment. It was first developed by Macromedia, and released in 1995 and was later acquired by Adobe Systems in 2005. Such content can be viewed in a web browser on any computer with the Shockwave Player plug-in installed.

Content is developed with Adobe Director and published on the Internet. You can help the Adobe Wiki by updating it.Īdobe Shockwave Player (formerly Macromedia Shockwave Player and also known as Shockwave for Director), was a freeware plug-in for viewing multimedia and video games in web pages, content created on the Adobe Shockwave platform. This article needs to be dewikipediafied.
