In the game, you can trigger access to code functions by collecting power-ups like fire flowers or 1-Up mushrooms. Bling used code written by SNES hacker "p4plus2" to write "byte after byte of arbitrary data" by moving to specific X-coordinates and spin jumping his way into system memory that Nintendo wasn't using. That repeated for 331 bytes of processor instructions. Written by spin jumping. Yes, it's as crazy as it sounds.

Once that was finished, the game stopped running its own code and instead ran the version of Flappy Bird he'd meticulously spin-jumped into memory. The result? A cute little Italian plumber weaving his way through the warp pipes that Dong Nguyen's creation was "inspired" by. The process took about an hour and he live-streamed the whole thing on Twitch over the weekend if you want to see it happen in real-time. Bling's also written a detailed guide for doing this yourself. For the less patient among us, the video below will get you up to speed in minutes.