The first Irish edition of
30 Seconds was launched in December 2010. The idea for an Irish version of 30 Seconds occurred during a phone call between two Irish friends, Greg Dooley and Liam Ryan. Under the company name of Woodland Games, the pair, alongside the original inventor of the game, Calie Esterhuyse, carried out extensive market research before releasing the game in 2010. Dooley, a former teacher from Cork, is the de facto editor of the Irish edition, going through all 2,400 words to see what needs to be updated or localised. He believes that the popularity of the game comes from its broad appeal "across general knowledge, sports, politics, pop culture, celebrities". Grassroots marketing on local radio and getting stocked by independent shops as well as
Smyths and
Toymaster’s saw the selling of 1,500 games in 2011 and gradually sales grew to 3,000 in year three and 5,000 by 2014. After five years 20,000 games had been sold and the company had ramped up its promotion and PR considerably. In May 2020, during the first coronavirus lockdown, stock that was meant to last until October completely sold out in retailers across Ireland. More than 30,000 units sold in 2020. ==References==