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Learn MoreShoutout to (aka Uriah, a Google developer) for bringing these whimsical ideas to life!
The original Google Gravity was rigid. Buttons were square. The logo was a block of text. Somewhere around 2018, a new subgenre of web experiments emerged: .
Short promotional blurb Experience the web like never before — poke, pull, and crack the Google page as gooey, physics-driven slime. Watch letters stretch, snap, and splash across the screen in a delightfully messy interactive demo.
Before understanding the "cracked" slime variations, it is essential to look at the architectural foundation of web-based physics simulations. is the online alias of Ricardo Cabello, a brilliant Spanish web developer and computer graphics pioneer. google gravity slime mr doob cracked
Because Google frequently updates its actual homepage code, the original "Easter egg" version on the main Google site is often inaccessible through standard search.
If you meant a (like non-Newtonian fluid or gooey blob), Mr Doob also created other interactive experiments, but not a famous "slime." You might be thinking of:
Every element became a physical object with weight, mass, and collision boundaries. Shoutout to (aka Uriah, a Google developer) for
Use cases
Go to Google , type "Google Gravity," and click I'm Feeling Lucky .
You can use your mouse to grab the Google logo or the search bar and throw them across the screen like digital toys. The logo was a block of text
. A pioneer in creative coding and three.js, Mr.doob became the unofficial king of "Interactive Google" experiments. His philosophy was simple: take the most rigid, organized interface on the planet (Google) and apply the chaotic laws of physics to it. The Phenomenon: Google Gravity In 2009, Mr.doob released Google Gravity
Mr. Doob, a website created by Italian developer Stefano "Mr. Doob" Cozzani, was another cornerstone of early 2000s web entertainment. Mr. Doob offered a collection of simple yet addictive flash games, including the infamous "What the Bleep Do You Do?" and "Papa's Games." However, it was the "cracked" version of Mr. Doob that gained notoriety.
The experiment originally launched on March 18, 2009 .
What makes it truly "cracked" or "broken" in a fun way is that the search bar still works . If you type a query and hit enter, the search results fall from the top of the screen like digital debris, adding to the pile of "slime" at the bottom. Why "Slime" and "Cracked"?