


Page through the gallery above to see some real-world locations transformed into chaotic Pac-Man insanity. Plus, there's a bonus level in the mix for those of you who just want to set the highest score possible and clear level after level after level.

So we picked five maps from each city where WIRED has an office: five in SF, five in Boston, and five in NYC. We're based in San Francisco, but news editor Emily Dreyfuss does her thing in Boston, and there's a rag-tag crew of editorial types banging on keyboards in New York City. We decided to scan Google Maps for the most mind-bending Pac-Man locations in the WIRED editorial world. You can run the little guy up and down city streets, gobbling up little dots while the ghosts give chase. Doing so lets you play Pac-Man right there in Google Maps, using real locations as your levels. While you're perusing a map in the browser, you can click on a Pac-Man icon in the lower left corner. The weird desert illustration in the coordinates mentioned above is called the Atacama Giant, which can be seen from space. 15.Today on the Internet, the Google Maps team pushed out one of the greatest, if not the greatest, April Fools' Day easter eggs in history. One of the funny google maps coordinates is the giant strange symbol in Chile’s Atacama Desert on a slanted hill. Spiderman in Japan 3517'26.3'N 13644'11.8'E Ichinomiya, Japan 14. I wonder if these two know that Google kept this scene since 2012. Here’s a small selection of the best ones, in no particular order. The highest rated pictures from Google Maps Street View according to our visitors since the start in 2007. There are quite a few Google Map images that really seem to terrify people or offer the springboard for imaginary terror. What won’t change is our collective love for a good mystery or scary story. In actuality, though, it's a simple natural design in Antarctica. At a quick glance, it appears an alien is peeking its head out of the crevice of the moon. If viewers entered '7200'36.0's 16834'40.0'e into Google Earth, they may be surprised by what they find. With increasing adoption of high-definition video - which, of course, we don’t really have with Google Street View - we lose the images in which we find hidden monsters altogether. This coastline is part of a small island off the coast of Antarctica. The rabbit, over 200 feet long, was spotted on Google Earth not long after it launched and it led to questions. And the “figure” in the background could be as harmless as a leaf hanging off of the fence.īad photos have been leading to wild theories forever, and low-rez digital images became fuel for conspiracy theories in the video age. In the Italian region of Piedmont sits the 5,000 foot tall mountain of Colletto Fava, atop which is something bizarre: an enormous, pink rabbit. The truth is, the image could just be showing something innocuous, like a living little girl playing in the graveyard, who just happened to be awkwardly captured by a Street View camera like that time a “UFO” was spotted on Street View in San Francisco. And according to very reputable news source The Daily Mirror, some people believe they can see a mystery figure in the background of the Street View shot. An amusing hedge labyrinth may be found just off a major Irish highway south of Dublin Airport. Though the actual location of this weird place is not known, this image is one of the weirdest places on Google Earth. In the foreground, a “ghost” girl appears to be peeking out from behind a tree. There’s a building in some locality on which somebody has proposed. Anyone who visits the Martha Chapel Cemetery in Texas via Google Maps may be able to spot two “mysterious” figures, seemingly hanging out on the grounds of the graveyard.
