Get your Angry Birds gear up. The addictive and fun mobile game now has paraphernalia for sale at their first store. Actually not that local for those in the states right now but hey next vacation you can check it out. Details on the new store after the jump.

Follow Tat WZA on Twitter

WZA on Google+

X

@ShottaDru

Shotta Dru on Google+

Looking to surround yourself with Angry Birds-themed toys, swag, and maybe even a gigantic slingshot just like the one used to fling the video games’ eponymous feathered furies at those devious, egg-stealing pigs? Look no further than the world’s first Angry Birds retail store, which opened this week.
Of course, you’ll need to book a flight to Helsinki, Finland to do so. That’s where Finland-based game developer Rovio has opened its first Angry Birds store, though the company says plans to expand beyond its home country are in the works.
For now, you can visit the Angry Birds Facebook page to catch a glimpse of what you’re missing—which is basically a clean, well-lighted space full of shelves stacked high with stuffed animals, books, and assorted knick-knacks of either an avian or porcine bent.
Thing is, you don’t really have to go to Finland to get a lot of this stuff. Rovio already offers various items of Angry Birds merchandise online, including plush toys, backpacks, and even a book of egg recipes. The company has been upping the ante on Angry Birds branding ever since the wildly addictive mobile puzzle game caught on, even making the rounds in Hollywood to test the waters for a possible onslaught of Angry Birds comic books, cartoons, movies, and merchandising.
That’s probably a smart move. As Rovio CEO Mikael Hed told Daily Variety a little more than a year ago, Angry Birds may be a massive hit but it’s tough to catch such lightning in a bottle twice. So it’s probably wiser to ride the known success as far as you can take it.
“It doesn’t make sense [to produce a slate of different games] when you have a hit of any caliber,” Hed said at the time. “When you create brand equity, to do that again would be a difficult task rather than nurture and build around what you have.”

PcMag