![]() So where a single player will, so to speak, insert a single coin, clicking twice sets up a two-player game. And unlike most of the special logos, which disappear off the home page-but are available in perpetuity in the archives-when the day is over, the Pac-Man doodle will stay up for 48 hours.įor the Pac-Man project, the team has converted the "I'm feeling lucky" button into an "Insert coin" slot, reminiscent of the place where countless kids have pumped billions of quarters over the years.įittingly, the team decided that if they were going to make their Pac-Man game authentic, they would need to make it playable by two people at once. But for the Pac-Man celebration (see video below), Google has pulled out all the stops and has built, from scratch, a fully-playable version of the game, complete with 255 levels and re-created (but authentic) sounds and graphics. Until now, the most interactive of the logos had been one last Halloween that users could click to see more candy, and another for Isaac Newton's birthday that dropped apples. "When we became aware of the.anniversary," said Ryan Germick, a member of the Google Doodle team, "we thought it would be awesome to create not only something that references Pac-Man on the home page, but also something playable." ![]() ![]() But a few months ago, when the team discovered that May 22 would be the 30th anniversary of the release of Pac-Man in Japan-it was actually called Puck Man, but that name was rejected in the United States because of the propensity of the "P" to chip and look like an "F"-they knew they had to do something extra special. ![]()
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