« Reply #31 on: Today at 08:28:31 AM »

“We made a little game for when there's no internet… and it ended up connecting the entire world.” 🦖🌐
Back when I worked on the Chrome team at Google, a random idea popped up during a meeting:
“What if, instead of showing a boring error when the internet’s down… we showed something fun?”
That spark led to the birth of a pixelated dinosaur running through a desert. Why a dino? Because having no internet feels like going back to the prehistoric age. 🏜️🦕
Together with Sebastien Gabriel and Alan Bettes, we started building it just for fun. No budget. No expectations. Just a side project squeezed between other tasks. At first, the dino only jumped… then came the cacti, the birds, and those retro 90s-style pixels. What no one knew was that while I was coding this simple game, I was dealing with something deeply personal: my father had been diagnosed with a serious illness. 🧠💔
Late nights working from home, trying to stay afloat mentally — that game became my escape. A small pocket of control during a time when everything else felt out of control. We eventually launched it quietly… and then, out of nowhere, it blew up. It spread like wildfire — in schools, offices, airports with no WiFi. That tiny dino, born as a joke, became a symbol. And for me, a quiet form of healing.
I never imagined something so small could resonate so deeply. What I love most is that people of all ages can play it without needing instructions. It’s pure. Simple. Honest — like so many good things in life. I may never be recognized in the streets, but knowing that something we made with care helps brighten frustrating moments? That’s worth everything. 💚🖥️
Sometimes, the simplest ideas are born on the hardest days… and go on to touch millions of lives without you even realizing it.
– Edward Jung, lead designer behind the Chrome Dino Game
« Last Edit: Today at 10:38:55 AM by MysteRy »

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