Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Business

Google Maps adds playable Pac-Man game on city streets

Search engine company Google has added a button to its Google Maps mapping software that lets users play the classic arcade game Pac-Man on city streets.

Cursor keys will navigate a flashing Pac-Man icon through the streets

An image of Google Maps is shown as it looked on Tuesday, with a playable version of Pac-Man superimposed over a section of Toronto's streets. (Pete Evans/CBC)

Google has addeda button to its Google Maps software that lets users play the classic arcade game Pac-Man on real city streets.

Google Maps users noticed on Tuesday the presence of a new button, toward the lower left of thescreen, that converts whatever cityscape the user is looking at into a Pac-Man map.

The company sent out this cryptic tweet on Tuesday, suggesting something with aPac-Man themewas coming.

Then asupport page on Google's corporate website offeredhints and tricks for the game.

It's not clear if the new feature is tied to April Fools' Day, the arrival of Easter this weekend (such hidden online gems are often called "Easter eggs" by video gamers) or something else.Last year, Google made its mapping page a playable version of the video game Pokemon.

Whatever the reason, a Google Mapsuser can tap the cursor keys to navigate a flashing Pac-Man icon through streets and away from fourghosts from the game Inky, Pinky, Blinky and Clyde.

(Based on CBC News's exhaustive research, if you do well enough, you can even move up a level.)

The game doesn't work on all maps, however, as it requires a certain complexity of streets. In rural areas or over water, users get a message that says, "It looks like Pac-Man can't play here. There aren't enough roads in the area for Pac-Man to get around" and instructs them to try again somewhere else.

On mobile, the game only works if the user is in certain locations. If the user solves a riddle, a button appears that lets the userplay the game by swiping different directions on a mobile device.

This isn't the first time Google has made a Pac-Man themed game for its users. In 2010, the company's logo on its home page converted into a playable version of the game. That time, Google users wasted a collective 550 years' worth of time on the page, digital consultancy Rescue Time calculated.