Old google doodle games Google helps kill boredom of stay at home

Google has started publishing a series of interactive doodles that bring back popular games from previous doodles. At a time when people are staying indoors to stop the spread of novel coronaviruses, Google is trying to please people and give them some time to spare.
Today's doodles have brought back the coding game from 2017 called Car Coding for Carrots ', completing 50 years of kids' coding. The series reportedly will run for two weeks. There will be a total of 10 doodles and all these will be popular Google doodle games from the past. Google Doodle games are part of Google's interactive doodles.

As people around the world continue to deal with the lockdown to slow down the spread of Covid-19, Google has started bringing back some of its old doodles which were games that you could play on the browser. The first game to be brought is Doodle, title Car Coding for Carrots. The game requires you to create a combination of simple commands for your rabbit to perform actions.
As COVID-19 is affecting communities around the world, people and families everywhere are spending more time at home. In light of this, we are launching a Throwback Doodle series in some of our popular interactive Google Doodle games!
Starting April 27, the search engine is re-launching 10 doodles over two weeks with one of the playable doodles making a comeback every day. When a user’s mouse hovers over the doodle on the Google homepage a message appears that says “Stay and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodles”.
The theme of this new initiative is Stay and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodle. Coding for Carrots is the first throwback game in the series. This lets you create simple commands that control a rabbit and guide you to collect all the carrots in the level. It can only be accessed by clicking on the doodle, which will give you the option Play.
It has a kids friendly user interface and only works by dragging and dropping commands. Coding for carrots was first used in 2017 as a Google Doodle to celebrate 50 years of coding language for children called logos. The Google Doodle game is a great way to entertain children, especially in times when going out and playing is not an option.
As is tradition with interactive doodles, the Monday's Google Doodle is animated (seen above) and shows one of the ‘O' sitting at a computer (the first ‘O') and typing away. Hovering over it show the theme of the series, with the specific doodle named at the end - "Stay and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodles: Coding (2017)". There is a ‘Play' button as a part of Monday's Google Doodle, and clicking on the doodle also shows a search for “popular google doodle games.”
Home and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodles: Coding (2017) Doodle is available in India from 27 April, covering Europe, Russia, parts of Africa and Southeast Asia, Australia as well as both North and South America. Is available in In the meantime you can see a list of interactive Google doodles.
According to a report by 9to5Google, the search giant will complete these games in two weeks. The report states that multiplayer games are also expected to be a part of this initiative. Google may have plans to push five games by Friday this week and the remaining five by next week.

Google has started publishing a series of interactive doodles that bring back popular games from previous doodles. At a time when people are staying indoors to stop the spread of novel coronaviruses, Google is trying to please people and give them some time to spare.
Today's doodles have brought back the coding game from 2017 called Car Coding for Carrots ', completing 50 years of kids' coding. The series reportedly will run for two weeks. There will be a total of 10 doodles and all these will be popular Google doodle games from the past. Google Doodle games are part of Google's interactive doodles.

As people around the world continue to deal with the lockdown to slow down the spread of Covid-19, Google has started bringing back some of its old doodles which were games that you could play on the browser. The first game to be brought is Doodle, title Car Coding for Carrots. The game requires you to create a combination of simple commands for your rabbit to perform actions.
As COVID-19 is affecting communities around the world, people and families everywhere are spending more time at home. In light of this, we are launching a Throwback Doodle series in some of our popular interactive Google Doodle games!
Starting April 27, the search engine is re-launching 10 doodles over two weeks with one of the playable doodles making a comeback every day. When a user’s mouse hovers over the doodle on the Google homepage a message appears that says “Stay and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodles”.
The theme of this new initiative is Stay and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodle. Coding for Carrots is the first throwback game in the series. This lets you create simple commands that control a rabbit and guide you to collect all the carrots in the level. It can only be accessed by clicking on the doodle, which will give you the option Play.
It has a kids friendly user interface and only works by dragging and dropping commands. Coding for carrots was first used in 2017 as a Google Doodle to celebrate 50 years of coding language for children called logos. The Google Doodle game is a great way to entertain children, especially in times when going out and playing is not an option.
As is tradition with interactive doodles, the Monday's Google Doodle is animated (seen above) and shows one of the ‘O' sitting at a computer (the first ‘O') and typing away. Hovering over it show the theme of the series, with the specific doodle named at the end - "Stay and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodles: Coding (2017)". There is a ‘Play' button as a part of Monday's Google Doodle, and clicking on the doodle also shows a search for “popular google doodle games.”
Home and Play at Home with Popular Past Google Doodles: Coding (2017) Doodle is available in India from 27 April, covering Europe, Russia, parts of Africa and Southeast Asia, Australia as well as both North and South America. Is available in In the meantime you can see a list of interactive Google doodles.
According to a report by 9to5Google, the search giant will complete these games in two weeks. The report states that multiplayer games are also expected to be a part of this initiative. Google may have plans to push five games by Friday this week and the remaining five by next week.