This page was made to host the Escape to Plastic Beach hangliding webgame that was originally available for Unity and iPad on the Gorillaz website. After a lot of trial and error. I was able to find a browser and plug-ins that would play it and isolate the file for easy access.

Don't See The Game On This Page?

Follow these instructions to make it work!

1. Download Pale Moon Browser Portable Version 29.4.6 32 BIT VERSION from this page: https://www.palemoon.org/archived.shtml (You'll have to search for it yourself, the page owners requested not to hotlink)

[NOTE: You may also need to download Pale Moon Browser 28.9.3 (non-portable) from the above link. I don't know why, but not having it installed made the game not work on one of the four computers I tested. I would only bother with this if you're having issues.]

2. Install this version of Unity Web Player from Web Archive (alternately, you can reload this page in Pale Moon and grab the download right from the player)

3. In the Pale Moon Portable version, go to "add-ons" make sure you can see "Unity Player 2.6.1.31223" in the add-on list. Set it to "Ask to Activate" if it isn't already.

4. Refresh this page, the browser will warn you about the unsupported add-on. Just press "Activate Unity Player"

5. Enjoy!


F.A.Q

• "I want the .Unity3d file"

Here's the link: https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/vp495g3v4sc7jm5wqrfqy/a?rlkey=8hlv7jlcs09lvm85n9i1kw1r1&dl=0 it's just called "a" there's no need to change the name or add an extension.

If you want to unpack it, download UtinyRipper from GitHub and drag the "a" file into it. It will generate an asset folder which you can open in Unity.

If you want to play the game offline, copy this code into a text document and replace the line "PLACE THE FULL ADDRESS OF THE ''A'' FILE HERE" with the location of the above file you downloaded. Then change the extension from .txt to .html and open it in Pale Moon Portable.

<p style="text-align: center;"><object id="UnityObject" classid="clsid:444785F1-DE89-4295-863A-D46C3A781394"
    width="600" height="450"
    codebase="http://webplayer.unity3d.com/download_webplayer/UnityWebPlayer.cab#version=2,0,0,0">
    <param name="FULL ADRESS TO .UNITY3D FILE " value="a.unity3d" />
    <embed id="UnityEmbed" src="PLACE THE FULL ADDRESS OF THE ''A'' FILE HERE" width="600" height="450"
        type="application/vnd.unity" pluginspage="http://www.unity3d.com/unity-web-player-2.x" />
</object></p>

You wouldn't have happen to have the Flash games from the Plastic Beach site, would you?

God, I wish Sadly no. From what I've heard, the .swf files for the Flash games were stored server-side and were no longer available once they were removed from the server even though the web page was archived.

• Got anything else?

Here's the island ripped from the Unity files as a .stl