Google Five Nights at Freddy's Easter Egg
👇 Scroll down to start the experience!
Quick Facts
Watch translucent animatronic eyes flicker over your search results, then replay all three known variants.
2025-12-05
Recreated
(Discontinued by Google)
Try the Easter Egg
The Original Easter Egg
How It Started
Public fan reports started appearing on December 5, 2025, the same day Five Nights at Freddy's 2 opened in the United States. Fans quickly noticed a hidden Search promo tied to FNaF-related queries on both desktop and mobile.
Coverage and community posts at minimum identified triggers such as "FNAF 2," "Toy Freddy," "Toy Chica," "Toy Bonnie," "Freddy Fazbear," and Foxy-related searches. Rather than launching a full mini-game, Google added a brief horror flourish directly on top of ordinary Search results.
What It Did
When the effect fired, a pair of translucent animatronic eyes flickered over the results page, glanced around, drifted across the screen, and faded away again. It felt more like a quick jolt across the results page than a full takeover, so the normal results stayed visible underneath.
Fan captures also suggest Google prepared multiple eye-color variants for different character searches. This recreation brings the three known eye variants together on one page, with a small in-page button row for switching between them.
Impact and Reach
The promo spread because it was tiny, creepy, and instantly testable. Fans only needed one search to see whether Google had hidden the eyes for a favorite character, then they could screen-record the result and pass the trigger along.
That simplicity also made the scare surprisingly effective. Community posts compared the different eye colors, while even users who called the effect goofy admitted the sudden flicker could still make them jump when it appeared out of nowhere.
Its Discontinuation
The original promo was removed in March 2026, after only about three months.
That roughly three-month run feels short for a movie tie-in Search promo. This is still only a guess, but the sudden scare may really have helped push it out early: one community reaction described seeing it on a first FNaF search and practically jumping out of the chair, suggesting Google may have decided it was a little too startling for an ordinary Search page.
The Restored Experience
What’s Different Here
This recreation preserves the translucent stare over the results page, the slow eye sweep, and the brief fade-out loop, then lets you replay all three eye variants in one place.
The Easter Egg Experience
Click the button above to open the mock search results page. After a short delay, the current animatronic stare flickers over the results, and you can tap the character buttons to switch to another variant without reloading.
How to Try It
- Click the button above to enter the page.
- Wait for the current eyes to flicker in over the results.
- Watch the stare glance around, sweep across the page, and fade out.
- Tap another character button whenever you want to compare a different variant.
- Use the back or close controls to leave the effect when you are done.
The button row lets you compare the three eye variants directly inside the restored search results page.
Final Thoughts
Google's Five Nights at Freddy's Search gag was small, eerie, and more memorable than its size suggested. This recreation makes that quick, unsettling results-page scare easy to revisit now that the official version is gone.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is the Google Five Nights at Freddy's Easter egg?
It was a small Google Search movie promo tied to Five Nights at Freddy's 2. Instead of launching a game, the effect briefly overlaid the results page with a pair of translucent animatronic eyes that glanced around and faded away.
Fans remembered it because it was simple, strange, and unexpectedly effective. One search was enough to test a trigger, compare eye colors with friends, and sometimes get a genuine little jolt when the flicker appeared out of nowhere.
This page lets you replay all three eye variants in one place, so you can revisit them without chasing old clips or dead triggers.
How do I trigger or replay it?
Coverage and fan reports identified queries such as "FNAF 2," "Toy Freddy," "Toy Chica," "Toy Bonnie," "Freddy Fazbear," and Foxy-related searches, but some character-to-variant mappings are still best-effort rather than fully documented.
In our recreation, click the button above to open the page. The current variant plays automatically, and you can switch to another version with the character buttons inside the restored Search results page.
