Google May 21 published a mini version of Pac-Man, the popular game featuring an insatiable yellow dot that gobbles smaller yellow dots while being chased by ghosts, as a "playable" doodle. The doodle proved so popular with users that Google made the game available at google.com/pacman. It's not a big deal, but it's one of those small gestures that fosters good will among Google users all over the world. That good will may come in handy as regulators continue to pressure Google for its various expanding business interests.
Google's 30th birthday celebration of perennial arcade
favorite Pac-Man was so popular with fans of the venerable video game that the
search engine has decided to make it a permanent addition to its Web service
arsenal.
Google May 21 published a mini version of Pac-Man, the
popular game featuring an insatiable yellow dot that gobbles smaller yellow
dots while being chased by ghosts, as a "playable" doodle.
Over the weekend, users who went to Google.com pressed
the classic "Insert Coin" button, or waited a few seconds for the
game to load. Magically, users' computer screens were transformed into that
Atari box with the 8-bit cartridge they remember from the 1980s.
The doodle includes Pac-Man's original game logic,
graphics and sounds and even original bugs.
Users who wanted to grab a partner could throw in another
coin to have Ms Pac-Man join the game. Pac-Man is controlled with arrow keys or
by clicking on the maze, while Ms. Pac-Man is controlled using the WASD letter keys.
"Pac-Man seems like a natural fit for the Google
homepage,"
wrote Marcin Wichary, senior UX designer and developer for Google.
"They're both deceptively straightforward, carefully hiding their
complexity under the hood. There's a light-hearted, human touch to both of
them. And we can only hope you find using Google at least a quarter as
enjoyable as eating dots and chasing ghosts. You know, without actually needing
any quarters."
The free doodle game proved so popular, according to Marissa
Mayer, vice president of search and user experience for Google, that Google
May 23 moved the doodle game to its own
permanent Web page on Google at google.com/pacman.
It's not a big deal, but it's one of those small gestures
that fosters good will among Google users all over the world. That good will may
come in handy as
regulators continue to pressure Google for its various
expanding business interests.