Google Gravity Slime Mr Doob !!top!!
Elements pile up at the bottom of the screen according to a 2D rigid-body physics engine.
: Users can interact with the fallen elements by clicking and dragging them, throwing them around the browser window.
To understand the "Slime" variant, you must first look at the original Google Gravity project. Released in 2009, this experiment was built using the Box2D physics engine for JavaScript.
Whether you remember it as a trick to play on your school’s computer lab computers, or you are looking for that satisfying, squishy "slime" physics nostalgia, Google Gravity remains a masterclass in creative web design. Google Gravity Slime Mr Doob
To understand the "slime" and fluid variations that followed, one must first look at the foundation: the original experiment. Developed by Mr.doob and featured on the legendary Chrome Experiments platform, Google Gravity was designed to show off the hidden muscle of early HTML5 and JavaScript physics engines.
: Shaking the browser or clicking creates bouncy balls that flow and collide like a liquid. Magic Dust
Go to mrdoob.com → Projects → Chrome Experiments → Google Gravity. Then imagine it coated in green goo. That's the spirit of "Google Gravity Slime." Elements pile up at the bottom of the
In an era of high-fidelity 3D gaming and VR, why return to a janky, low-res falling Google logo? Because breeds the best toys. By limiting himself to the Google homepage as a canvas, Mr. Doob created something universally recognizable, instantly playable, and surprisingly deep.
You can visit the project directly on Mr.doob’s website or through restorations on sites like elgooG . Related "Fluid" Physics Experiments by Mr.doob
Only play these experiments from mrdoob.com , chromeexperiments.com , or a direct Google search using "I'm Feeling Lucky." Never download any software claiming to be "Google Slime." Released in 2009, this experiment was built using
Let’s start with the original phenomenon. is an interactive joke (an Easter egg) that reimagines the Google homepage as a 3D physics environment. Instead of the usual clean, static layout, every element of the page—the logo, the search bar, the buttons, the footer links—falls to the bottom of your browser window as if pulled by a massive gravitational force.
The experiment is fully interactive. Users can click on the Google logo or the search bar and violently fling them across the screen. The elements crash into the sides of the browser window, slide down the walls, and pile up on top of one another. The web page effectively becomes a digital sandbox. The Code Behind the Chaos
When a user visits the Google Gravity page, the search engine looks normal at first. Within a second, the heavy hand of digital gravity takes hold. The search bar, the Google logo, the buttons, and the navigation links all crash down to the bottom of the screen. Key Features of the Original Experiment
: Users can grab the Google logo, search bar, and buttons with their mouse or finger to fling them across the screen. Slime/Lava Effect