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Mallory Chowansky

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Aug 2, 2024, 9:47:05 PM8/2/24
to sepelunma

I had the game return to normal for a few hours yesterday and be fully playable again, without me doing anything. I noticed the advert cycle had changed to some cooking game now. It was a slots game before the freezes and crashes started in my first encounters of them. Anyway, the game eventually froze returning to the map screen after completing level 386 and the auto advert popping up. It is now back to crashing on log in and being totally unplayable.

I went to a few regional webpages for Angry Birds 2 on the Microsoft Store and most have reviews in May and June reporting the game freezing and crashing. Some say updates do it and others say it has been happening for a while and goes in cycles, just like the adverts seem to do.

Other than that, I just want to know if only I have those issues, because I am testing on three different devices with two different account and same thing happens eventually like on the screenshot above.

on win 10, same thing but I am able to move the mouse to the upper right and get the windows red X option and exit the game that way. Sometimes I restart windows, then try again and that time it will work.

Same for extra birds on defeat, extra card, rare chest, daily watch video quest or extra arena ticket. It has been like that for few days. Maybe we should all open tickets so Rovio can acknowledge the problem and act fast.

2 days ago I clicked on the regular levels icon.. to do level 1322.. it shut the game down.
Doing a clan battle, got a great score only to crash at the end when it should have shown me my new score..

Playing the daily eagle challenge.. at the end it says I won x number of golden eagle coins. usually 6 to 12, as I rarely make it past the 5 rooms.
Then on the exit page, it shows just 1 coin.
next day I go to collect and it says I won 1 coin.

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I love this post, Sharon. Not only is it extremely helpful, but it also reminds me of when Amy Hooper and I went birding Upper Newport Bay. We got to her car to find a Song Sparrow going berserk on itself through her rear view mirror. Once the battle was over, the scene of the crime was grisly!

The reason I ask, is that for three days in a row (from dawn till dusk)a pair of robins kept repeatedly bumping against our living room window, clearly trying to get inside. In the room on the table (and visible from the window) was a large bowl of brightly colored faux Easter eggs. I removed all egg facsimiles from sight and the robins finally gave up trying to get in half a day later. Before this, I had tried chasing them away, but to no avail. I cannot explain their behavior otherwise.

That is an interesting theory, but robins do not eat eggs like blue jays and crows. Females of some species of birds will engage in territorial battle, robins and cardinals both. If the eggs were what was causing the attack, they may have perceived them as being from a predatory bird nest like a crow, hawk or owl and were hoping to find something to mob.

Hello! I am really glad to come across this website. My family has had a large Robin attacking- and I mean attacking- our living room windows for days now. My husband power washed the blood and poop off of the window sills to find them covered again 3 hours later. This guy will attack for hours at a time. We thought for sure he did himself in but he must have left for a couple of hours because he came back for more! I am releived to know that this is normal behavior. I was worried that our Robin friend may have been sick- you never know what crazy new disease is going around. Thank you!

A paper on the topic of birds interacting with their reflection has just been published in Ornithological Observations, a semi-scientific e-journal published by BirdLife South Africa and the Animal Demography Unit at the University of Cape Town. The paper also features a reference to this post! You can download the it here =83

For birds, glass windows are worse than invisible. By reflecting foliage or sky, they look like inviting places to fly into. And because the sheer number of windows is so great, their toll on birds is huge. Up to about 1 billion birds die from window strikes in the U.S. each year, according to a 2014 study.

There are two main types of window collisions: daytime and nighttime. In daylight, birds crash into windows because they see reflections of vegetation or see through the glass to potted plants or vegetation on the other side. At night, nocturnal migrants (including most songbirds) crash because they fly into lighted windows.

For reasons not entirely understood, lights divert nocturnal migrants from their original path, especially in low-ceiling or foggy conditions. In the lighted area, they mill about, sometimes colliding with one another or the lighted structure. As a subsequent hazard, migrants drawn off course by urban lighting may roost safely nearby, only to become vulnerable to daytime reflections in windows the following day. The BirdCast project and the Fatal Light Awareness Program have more about this problem.

To deter small birds, markings such as decals on windows should ideally be spaced uniformly 2 inches apart across the entire outer surface of the glass. (This will safeguard the windows for even the smallest birds such as hummingbirds, gnatcatchers, siskins, kinglets, and the like.) Acopian BirdSavers, made of paracord, can be spaced 4 inches apart because of their greater visibility. All marking techniques should be applied to the outside of the window.

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