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- This year's Google doodle for Halloween lets people mix ingredients to play various minigames. Just don't look for an ending. October 30, 2013 3:44 PM PDT It's already Halloween in some countries, which means there's a new Google doodle. Already live in Australia (and soon elsewhere) is a new doodle for the holiday, which lets users become a witch and create a witches brew. Users can combine various ingredients to play mini games, from whack-a-mole with the undead, to a shell game where your goal is to find a mummy in a coffin. There are several others, which can be found with experimentation. That's about all you can do with this one, so if you're looking for an ending, it's a bit of a cliffhanger. Last year's Halloween doodle was similarly interactive, with a row of houses that contained various interactive elements. Adorning Google's home page with decorative, and increasingly interactive alternatives to its normal multi-color logo has been a tradition for the company since 1998. There's a team of people at Google who create the doodles, though the company also occasionally allows outsiders to make them too. Our favorite Google Doodles through the years (pictures) 1-2 of 41 Scroll Left Scroll Right
This year's Google doodle for Halloween lets people mix ingredients to play various minigames. Just don't look for an ending. October 30, 2013 3:44 PM PDT It's already Halloween in some countries, which means there's a new Google doodle. Already live in Australia (and soon elsewhere) is a new doodle for the holiday, which lets users become a witch and create a witches brew. Users can combine various ingredients to play mini games, from whack-a-mole with the undead, to a shell game where your goal is to find a mummy in a coffin. There are several others, which can be found with experimentation. That's about all you can do with this one, so if you're looking for an ending, it's a bit of a cliffhanger. Last year's Halloween doodle was similarly interactive, with a row of houses that contained various interactive elements. Adorning Google's home page with decorative, and increasingly interactive alternatives to its normal multi-color logo has been a tradition for the company since 1998. There's a team of people at Google who create the doodles, though the company also occasionally allows outsiders to make them too. Our favorite Google Doodles through the years (pictures) 1-2 of 41 Scroll Left Scroll Right
This year's Google doodle for Halloween lets people mix ingredients to play various minigames. Just don't look for an ending.
It's already Halloween in some countries, which means there's a new Google doodle.
Already live in Australia (and soon elsewhere) is a new doodle for the holiday, which lets users become a witch and create a witches brew.
Users can combine various ingredients to play mini games, from whack-a-mole with the undead, to a shell game where your goal is to find a mummy in a coffin. There are several others, which can be found with experimentation.
That's about all you can do with this one, so if you're looking for an ending, it's a bit of a cliffhanger.
Last year's Halloween doodle was similarly interactive, with a row of houses that contained various interactive elements.
Adorning Google's home page with decorative, and increasingly interactive alternatives to its normal multi-color logo has been a tradition for the company since 1998. There's a team of people at Google who create the doodles, though the company also occasionally allows outsiders to make them too.