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You don’t need a Switch to play Mario Kart. This YouTube video somehow lets you join the race.

Someone smuggled Rainbow Road into YouTube, and it kind of works

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Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone
Mario Kart DS running on the Red Magic 11S Pro via emulation Vikhyaat Vivek / Digital Trends

A pair of creators has found a way to make YouTube more than just a video streaming experience. You can now play Mario Kart inside it. Atlas Arcade and Animated Subtitles have created a fan-made interactive video that lets desktop users drive through Rainbow Road using keyboard controls.

It lasts just over a minute and offers a stripped-down version of the familiar kart-racing experience, yet the technical trickery behind it is far more interesting than its size suggests. This is not an official Nintendo release or a complete browser port of Mario Kart. It is a YouTube video twisted into behaving like a game, and that may be even cooler.

The subtitles are secretly a character menu

The experiment uses YouTube’s 360-degree spherical video feature, which lets viewers move their perspective around footage instead of staring at one fixed frame. Atlas Arcade uses that freedom to let players move their kart left and right along the course.

Animated Subtitles handles the coolest part. Each selectable caption language corresponds to a different Mario Kart racer. Changing from one English regional subtitle track to another can swap Mario for characters including Luigi, Princess Peach, Toad, Yoshi, Wario, and Bowser. In other words, the closed-caption menu has been repurposed into a character select screen.

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The video combines custom captions, keyboard shortcuts, looping footage, and additional rendered elements to create the illusion of a tiny game running inside the YouTube player. No conventional game download or separate website is involved.

Rainbow Road was the right choice

While this brings a fun experience, there are some obvious limitations. You only get access to a short segment of the Rainbow Road course. Movement is simplified, and you can’t really pick up any of the items or engage with the drifting system. There are no opponents either. So treat it more like a playable tech demo. Its appeal comes from watching creators force a video platform to do something it was never designed to handle.

The result has the same scrappy charm as old browser and Flash games. You click a link, press a few keys, and start playing within seconds. Atlas Arcade has already experimented with other interactive YouTube videos, and this is just the latest bit of fun.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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