General Purpose Integrated Circuits Market Recovery and Impact Analysis Report
Aug 31, 2023South Wales bus cuts could cause isolation for residents
Aug 19, 2023Power Management Integrated Circuit (PMIC) Market to See Major Growth by 2029
Aug 13, 2023Exploring the Power and Versatility of Switch ICs
Jul 29, 2023AstraZeneca data at ERS 2023 demonstrate leadership in transforming care across a broad respiratory portfolio of inhaled and biologic medicines
Jul 18, 2023The 11 best, worst, and weirdest Android Easter eggs of all time
From Nyandroid to zombies, here's our favorite — and least favorite — of Google's hidden secrets
It's just about that time again. After months of buildup, we're likely just weeks — if not days — away from the official launch of Android 14. New Android versions are exciting for plenty of reasons, from new features to the official statues Google places on its campus, but one of our favorite elements has to be the annual Easter egg. I mean, this year's space-themed exploration game is pretty incredible, even if I have no idea what I'm doing while I play it.
Since the days of Gingerbread, Google has hidden secrets in the settings menu for aspiring sleuths to discover, usually based around the dessert-themed codename du jour. Not every one of these is a runaway success, though; for every awe-inspiring addition, there's one that makes you question whether Google's phoning it in. From ancient internet memes to clever puzzles, here's a look at the good, the bad, and the downright ugly across the history of Android Easter eggs.
Let's start out with something fun. The Easter egg hidden in Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich wasn't Google's first — we'll get to that later — but it remains one of most creative secrets that doesn't morph into some kind of interactive game. Launched in 2011, Ice Cream Sandwich combined its eponymous dessert with the hottest meme of the year: Nyan Cat.
Everybody's favorite Pop-Tarts/cat hybrid was a huge viral hit in the spring of that year, and Google itself delivered a Bugdroid-flavored take on the concept in its Android 4.0 Easter egg. While we'd eventually see these hidden gimmicks morph into even more creative concepts, this feels like where it really all began.
Eighteen months before Ice Cream Sandwich combined Google's tablet and smartphone UIs into one shared OS version, Android 3.0 Honeycomb took the world by… drizzle. This dedicated big screen experience, designed specifically to help Android slates compete with the still-new iPad, was a bit of a bust, though it did give us a preview of the Tron-esque Holo interface that would eventually move to phones with ICS.
Aw, the old AP watermark...
And speaking of Tron, here's the Easter egg. It's… fine. It's a blue bee featuring the Bugdroid's iconic head. It says "REZZZZZ…" when you activate it, because Tron: Legacy (admittedly an underrated gem) was a relatively new release at the time. But it's hard to not want more from something like this. Clearly, Google should've licensed Derezzed from Daft Punk — maybe that would give this Easter egg the energy it so clearly needs.
One year after hitting it out of the park with Ice Cream Sandwich, Google returned with its Easter egg for Android 4.1, Jelly Bean. Frankly, this is one of my favorite Android OS updates ever — it's when it really started to feel like a cohesive, modern OS for the first time — and while even better secrets were on the horizon, this one is plenty cute, and by far the most complex Google had offered up to that date.
In what would become a mainstay feature of Android's Easter egg, this one first delivers a simple cartoon jelly bean before eventually kicking off a quick screensaver after pressing and holding on said bean. You can drag and drop any of the jelly beans scattered around your screen, delivering some excellent interactive elements. While it would eventually be outclassed by later additions, I'm pretty fond of this particular Easter egg. It's simple, it's cute, and it helped get us to where we are today.
Let's jump way into the future. It's 2017, and Google is about to drop Android 8.0 Oreo, its second-ever branded version. When the Easter egg finally arrives in DP4, you prepare yourself for a cute — if obvious — cookie-related secret. And instead, you find yourself staring at this terrifying octopus, a deep sea creature staring directly into your soul.
You get it, right? Android 8.0, eight legs? Yeah, it's a little sweaty. Maybe the branding deal hadn't been finalized yet. A couple of months later, when Android 8.1 launched, Google would eventually swap in an Oreo in place of the orange circle that initially hid this octopus of doom. But even then, a long-press would eventually bring you right back to the bottom of the sea. No thanks, Google.
Continuing a pretty good streak of Easter eggs for Google — Android 4.4 KitKat's sliding puzzle barely missed this list — Android 5.0 Lollipop might be my favorite Easter egg of all time. It's also really easy to explain: it's just a Flappy Bird clone.
Google's Material UI-themed OS update included a quick lollipop graphic to tie in its dessert codename, but a long-press would lead you to a copy of 2014's most viral hit, Flappy Bird. And since this was months after the initial game had been pulled offline by its creator, it actually gave Android users the chance to revisit the title before the year was up. Come on Google, put this minigame on the Play Store.
I'm not sure Marshmallow's Easter egg is "bad" so much as it's lazy. It's the same exact Flappy Bird minigame as seen in Lollipop, but with a new theme — and played right-to-left instead of left-to-right. But in the fall of 2015, it just didn't hit the same. Considering this followed a literal shrug used as a placeholder, it's hard to describe this Easter egg as anything else.
You know what take on a hit mobile game would've been cool? Pac-Man 256. Sure, it only arrived on the Play Store a month before Marshmallow's stable build launched, but you know what? Google could've made it work. A huge missed opportunity.
Thankfully, Google rebounded in 2016 with its most complex Easter egg to date. As if hearing my complaints about Marshmallow, Android 7.0 Nougat launched a take on Neko Atsume, a popular (at the time) cat collecting game on phones. After tapping on the N that appears from the version number, you'll gain the ability to collect kittens within the Quick Settings menu, all of which you can view at any time.
Google eventually revived this with Android 11, combining its "Android Neko" game with that version's smart home controls. This time around, you could give out food, water, and treats right alongside your other shortcuts. Unlike with Marshmallow, Google's double dip here felt a lot more justified, and with several years passing between versions, it was just as fun to see it make a comeback as the original had been in 2016. Still, since Nougat first debuted this minigame, it's taking the prize.
Android 9 Pie's Easter egg comes in two forms. This first is downright boring; a basic P appears on screen, allowing you to cycle through colors. Yawn. Snooze.
The second Easter egg arrived a couple of months later, but as a Pixel phone exclusive. After tapping the P a few times, you'd gain access to… a pretty basic drawing tool. Out of all of the Easter eggs to reserve as an exclusive for Google hardware, this is certainly a choice.
Hoo boy, this one's complex. What seems to start off as a basic logo Easter egg — like Android 9 Pie before it — quickly turns into something else entirely. If you drag and rotate the 1 and 0 in "10," thereby turning it into a "Q," you can access a Nonogram game. Not familiar with Nonogram? You might know it better by Picross, Paint by Numbers, or literally dozens of other games.
The goal is to fill in specific grids to create a new image by referring to the clues on each axis, eventually creating one of various symbols taken directly from Android. It's a fun one, reminiscent of the puzzles Google usually attaches to its I/O announcements, and frankly, I'd love to see the company revisit something like this.
Look, I get it. Android is a mature operating system now, right? And Google, for all its previous fun and games, has to put childish things behind it. For as exciting as Android 12 was at launch, though, couldn't it have received a better Easter egg? Sure, showing the logo surrounded by various colors was a fun way to highlight Material You, but without much in the way of interactivity — aside from a hidden widget you could add to your home screen — it felt a little empty.
That feeling only grew with Android 13. It's effectively the same Easter egg, but with emoji in place of colors. I guess it's a creative replacement, doubling as a shout-out to Emoji Kitchen, but like much of what Google shipped in 2022, it was a little difficult to feel truly excited about.
Are you aware of what the very first Android Easter egg was? Google didn't start its tradition with Android 1.0 in 2008; instead, it would take until 2010's Android 2.3 Gingerbread launch for the company to start hiding little secrets around the OS. But instead of a creative game, a cute logo, or even, I don't know, an MP4 file of the Gingerbread Man from Shrek, Google stuck this JPEG behind the Android version number in settings to create its very first Easter egg.
Yeah, talk about a weird start to an annual tradition. It's pretty funny to look back on now, but imagine discovering this by accident at two in the morning. You'd be pretty scared too. Personally, I think Google should return to this zombie theme sometime in the future — maybe for Android Z in 2028.
If you haven't already, you should check out the Android 14 Easter egg. It might not steal attention away from Starfield this fall, but Pixel 8 buyers will be ecstatic to know there's a worthwhile secret hidden on their future phones.
Will is the Phones Editor at Android Police, which means he usually has a dozen different smartphones on his desk at any given time. He covers everything from leaks of your next phone to the components that'll power it. He's got plenty of opinions about the current state of Android phones — thoughts you'll read in his reviews, editorials, and more. You'll also find him writing up our buyer's guides, where he hopes to help shoppers make the right choice in their next phone. Will appears on the Android Police podcast, where he occasionally taunts his co-hosts with bad opinions about smartwatches and charging cables, and writes AP's weekend polls. In his spare time, he produces podcasts, rewatches the same 37 films, and pretends not to have a never-ending backlog of video games. He lives in Buffalo, NY and is willing to give you chicken wing recommendations at any time. Just ask.