- Flipper Zero firmware continues as community developers gain influence
- The company reduces its direct support while opening development to users
- More than a million users force Flipper to rethink communication
Flipper Devices has confirmed that firmware development for its popular penetration testing gadget will continue.
The company said a smaller internal team will now oversee the project, relying more on input from its user base.
The change follows weeks of backlash after interviews and online discussions made it appear that active development had effectively stopped entirely.
The company explained that Flipper Zero’s more than 1 million users are now generating a volume of requests that its small team simply cannot handle through direct channels.
As a result, all communications will be moved to GitHub discussions, where community members can submit and vote on proposed changes.
Applications will be evaluated weekly, giving contributors a clearer idea of how proposals are progressing through the pipeline over time.
Pull requests from the community remain welcome, although they will be subject to stricter review standards before being accepted into official firmware.
Any firmware changes will require mandatory integration and regression testing, processes which themselves will be open to community participation.
The development team says it will maintain special oversight over AI-generated code affecting low-level functions, as these contributions are often difficult to verify.
Interface changes and updates requiring new documentation will also receive special attention from other internal staff.
Focus on new hardware
Flipper Zero Firmware 1.0 arrived in September 2024, after about three years of active development work from the company.
The most recent stable release, version 1.4.3, has been available since December 2025 with no major updates since.
At this point, the team reportedly considers the firmware mature, citing a stable SDK and fully implemented promised features.
Since then, attention has turned to new hardware projects, including the open Linux platform Flipper One built with help from the community.
The company also launched the Busy Bar device, intended to help people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder reduce daily distractions.
This product is expected to go on sale July 14, 2026 in the United States, United Kingdom, Europe, and Canada.
Flipper Devices says disabling direct messages on social media was necessary to redirect the growing volume of user requests.
It remains unclear whether this restructured, community-driven model can support meaningful firmware advancements, given reduced internal resources.
Via a sleeping computer
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