Pro tip for retro fans: Some users have remastered the original Google Gravity code to include "slime mode." You can find these by searching for "Google Gravity GitHub slime physics."
This is one of the most visually stunning variations. When you activate this trick, the screen becomes submerged in water, complete with seaweeds, bubbles, fish, and even a shark. The elements of the Google homepage drift and move as if buoyant, and you can create ripples in the water by moving your mouse, adding to the immersion.
For users who encounter it for the first time without knowing what it is, the sudden "collapse" of the world's most stable website is a hilarious and memorable subversion of expectations.
Mr.Doob (Ricardo Cabello) is a pioneer in web-based graphics and interactive design. He is perhaps best known in the programming community as the creator and main maintainer of , a massively popular JavaScript library used to create 3D graphics in a web browser without relying on external plugins.
This is the perfect counterpart to Google Gravity. Instead of falling down, all the elements on the page start floating around aimlessly as if they are in outer space. It is a peaceful and mesmerizing experience that turns the Google homepage into a slow-motion ballet of its own parts.
Would you like direct links to specific demos or a short list of recommended variants to try?
If you want
Google Gravity uses a 2D physics engine (like Box2D) translated to JavaScript. The engine assigns mass, friction, and gravity constants to HTML elements.
Other popular variations include Google Underwater , where the UI floats in a tank of water, and Google Gravity Lava, which adds a fiery, box-filled floor to the collapse. elgooG: Long-Buried Google Easter Eggs, Restored
Note: If you press "Enter" instead, you can click the top result which usually leads to Mr.doob's official site Interaction Guide
Young developers study Mr.Doob's work to learn how to implement physics engines in their own web applications.
: Surprisingly, the search bar still works; after "searching," the new results also drop into the pile. Chrome Experiment
It serves as a time capsule of what the internet looked like over a decade ago, preserved in a state of perpetual, interactive ruin. The Evolution into "Slime" and Liquid Simulation
Pro tip for retro fans: Some users have remastered the original Google Gravity code to include "slime mode." You can find these by searching for "Google Gravity GitHub slime physics."
This is one of the most visually stunning variations. When you activate this trick, the screen becomes submerged in water, complete with seaweeds, bubbles, fish, and even a shark. The elements of the Google homepage drift and move as if buoyant, and you can create ripples in the water by moving your mouse, adding to the immersion.
For users who encounter it for the first time without knowing what it is, the sudden "collapse" of the world's most stable website is a hilarious and memorable subversion of expectations.
Mr.Doob (Ricardo Cabello) is a pioneer in web-based graphics and interactive design. He is perhaps best known in the programming community as the creator and main maintainer of , a massively popular JavaScript library used to create 3D graphics in a web browser without relying on external plugins.
This is the perfect counterpart to Google Gravity. Instead of falling down, all the elements on the page start floating around aimlessly as if they are in outer space. It is a peaceful and mesmerizing experience that turns the Google homepage into a slow-motion ballet of its own parts.
Would you like direct links to specific demos or a short list of recommended variants to try?
If you want
Google Gravity uses a 2D physics engine (like Box2D) translated to JavaScript. The engine assigns mass, friction, and gravity constants to HTML elements.
Other popular variations include Google Underwater , where the UI floats in a tank of water, and Google Gravity Lava, which adds a fiery, box-filled floor to the collapse. elgooG: Long-Buried Google Easter Eggs, Restored
Note: If you press "Enter" instead, you can click the top result which usually leads to Mr.doob's official site Interaction Guide
Young developers study Mr.Doob's work to learn how to implement physics engines in their own web applications.
: Surprisingly, the search bar still works; after "searching," the new results also drop into the pile. Chrome Experiment
It serves as a time capsule of what the internet looked like over a decade ago, preserved in a state of perpetual, interactive ruin. The Evolution into "Slime" and Liquid Simulation