Google Gravity Slime Mr Doob 💯

Google Gravity Slime Mr Doob 💯

Click and drag any element—the logo, text, or buttons—and toss it around.

The phrase is now used by:

: Elements float freely as if in space, drifting and spinning when touched. Google Gravity Slime/Lava Google Gravity Slime Mr Doob

| Experiment | Official Status | Best Working Link | |------------|----------------|--------------------| | Google Gravity | ✔️ Still works | Search "Google Gravity" + "I'm Feeling Lucky" | | Google Slime | ⚠️ Harder to find | Try mrdoob.com/projects/chromeexperiments/google_slime | | Google Sphere | ✔️ Works | Direct Mr. Doob site | | Google Particles | ✔️ Works | Chrome Experiments archive |

At its core, Google Gravity is an interactive web experiment that digitally dismantles the Google homepage. When you load the page, the classic interface—logo, search bar, buttons, and all—collapses to the bottom of the screen as if suddenly caught in a strong gravitational field. But the fun doesn’t stop there. Once the elements fall, you can grab them with your mouse, fling them around the screen, and watch them bounce off each other and the edges of your browser window. You can literally pick up individual letters from the Google logo and toss them across your monitor, all while the search bar remains fully functional (if a bit tricky to find). It's a chaotic, mesmerizing sandbox that turns one of the world's most static web pages into a dynamic, interactive playground. Click and drag any element—the logo, text, or

While there isn't a specific experiment titled "Google Gravity Slime," the term often refers to the experience where the interface elements tumble and bounce like physical objects, or potentially other Mr.doob experiments like Voxels Liquid or Ball Pool which feature "slime-like" fluid physics. The Original Google Gravity Experiment

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. Doob site | | Google Particles | ✔️

Many developers inspired by Mr. Doob created "slime" or "fluid" simulations using WebGL. These scripts allow users to drag their mouse across the screen to create colorful, glowing trails of slime, smoke, or liquid that react to motion and gravity. How to Play with Google Gravity Today