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Magic Cat Academy is a series of short browser games created as Google Doodles for Halloween which were released every four years. The first game, Magic Cat Academy, also known as Doodle Halloween 2016, was released on October 30, 2016. The second, Magic Cat Academy 2, also known as Doodle Halloween 2020, was released on
Magic Cat Academy: Google: 2016 Adventure, strategy: Magic Cat Academy 2: Google: 2020 Adventure, strategy: The Majesty of Colors: Gregory Weir 2008 Puzzle Flash Mata Nui Online Game: Templar Studios 2001 Point-and-click adventure game: Flash Moderator Mayhem: Copia, Leveraged Play 2023 Casual: Monster Milktruck: Google Earth 2008 Racing ...
On October 24, 2024, the interactive Google Doodle game celebrated October's final half moon phase. On October 30–31, 2024, a third installment to the Magic Cat Academy was made for Halloween. It also had similar gameplay, but a different setting (space) and focused across the layers of the atmosphere.
The internet’s go-to homepage is popping off today. On Sept. 25, Google published its latest Doodle celebrating the worldwide appeal of popcorn. In addition to the art viewable on its homepage ...
If Lucky collects 23 of the 24 trophies, selecting the podium with no trophy reads the message "don't trust the bird", activating the final side quest. Lucky is then tasked with finding the true trophy master, who is revealed to be Momo, the black cat from Magic Cat Academy, the Google Doodle for Halloween 2016, 2020, and 2024. This changed ...
In honor of the 2012 London Olympics, Google has launched an athletic hurdle game on its homepage. The game is simple but fun. To make the Olympian run, just tap the left and right arrow keys on ...
Today's Olympic-themed Google Doodle game is as adorable as the rest, but possibly the most challenging. You see, in order to achieve a three-star score, your canoe must cross through each and ...
Due to the large-scale devastation from the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, in lieu of a traditional April Fools' hoax, Google Japan featured many never-before featured drawings from its 2009 Google Doodle competition, themed "What I Love About Japan" drawn by Japanese schoolchildren, saying "We promised that only the top prize winners ...