Skip to main content

The best video game Easter Eggs of all time

The chris houlihan room in Link to the past.
Nintendo

As long as there have been video games, there have been secrets hidden within them. There are some things like secret endings to find, but Easter Eggs are more about the fun of finding them than actually adding something to the game. It is a tradition that began at the beginning of the video game console generation timeline and persists to this day. Fans love scouring the biggest open-world games and looking into the code of the best indies to see if there’s some secret waiting to be found and shared. We can’t wait to see what Easter Eggs are found in all the upcoming video games, but for now, we wanted to look back and round up all the best ones from gaming history.

Adventure – Secret credits

The secret easter egg in Adventure.
Atari

We couldn’t start with any other Easter Egg than the one widely considered to be the first one in gaming history. Adventure is a very basic Atari game where you guide a block of pixels around a sprawling map trying to reach a chalace. This was in a period when games didn’t have credits, so no one knew who was making them besides the publisher. The solo developer of Adventure wanted to tell the world he made the game, but had to do it in a secret way that Atari wouldn’t see and remove. So, Warren Robinett made a secret room in the game that requires players to carry an invisible pixel to a specific place to access where he wrote out “Created by Warren Robinett.” He wasn’t sure anyone would be able to discover it, but a boy named Adam Clayton managed to somehow figure it out and even wrote to Atari to share his discovery. Thankfully, Robinett had already left the company at that time.

Recommended Videos

Diablo 2 – The cow level

The secret cow level in Diablo 2.
Blizzard

Some Easter Eggs are born out of rumors, such as the cow level. The urban legend went that players in the original Diablo could click on a herd of cows in town enough times to create a secret portal to a cow level. Fans even went so far as to create fake screenshots of this supposed cow level. While there was no truth to this, Blizzard took notice and actually included a cow level in Diablo 2. To find it, players would need to transmute a Tome of Town Portal and Writ’s Leg in the Horadrix Cube while inside the Rogue Encampment. Trying to mix these items anywhere else in the game will fail. Once done, players can go through the portal into the Moo Moo Farm where a mob of deadly bovine will attack wielding halberds until The Cow King appears as the final boss. Since then, other secret themed levels have appeared in most Blizzard titles.

A Link to the Past – The Chris Houlihan room

The chris houlihan room in Link to the past.
Nintendo

The Legend of Zelda games are always jam-packed with secrets, even the original on NES. These are usual secret items, heart pieces, or other collectibles. A Link to the Past has one very unique Easter Egg that was given out as a contest prize during a Nintendo Power promotion. Players could send in a photo of themselves fighting a specific boss from Final Fantasy for a chance to win getting their name put into a future Nintendo title. As it turns out, that game was A Link to the Past and Chris Houlihan was the winner, but accessing his special room is incredibly cryptic and feels more like a glitch than a true secret. To reach it, players have to confuse the game’s coordinates to fool it into putting Link into this failsafe room. If you pull it off, you can collect a ton of rupees and read a little message on the wall that reads “My name is Chris Houlihan. This is my top secret room. Keep it between us, OK?”

Dead Space – Chapter name spoilers

Isaac Clarke from the new Dead Space.
EA

Spoiler alert for Dead Space! Sometimes an Easter Egg isn’t something that takes a lot of searching or performing a series of cryptic actions to find. Dead Space has a few of those, to be sure, but it hides its best Easter Egg in plain sight. The concept of the game is that you play as an engineer attempting to repair a ship where his girlfriend Nicole is stationed after it is overrun by zombie-like aliens. The game is broken up into 12 named chapters, starting with New Arrivals, Intensive Care, Course Correction, and so on. What is only apparent once you’ve beaten the game and looked back is that the first letter of each chapter spells out a big reveal from the end of the game. All lined up, the chapters spell out NICOLE IS DEAD.

Batman Arkham Asylum – Arkham City plans

A map of arkham city in Arkham Asylum.
WB Games

One of the most common Easter Eggs is a tease for an eventual sequel. We didn’t know there was going to be another Arkham game after Asylum until it was revealed, but we could have if anyone had managed to find this Easter Egg before the developers broke down and told us about it. Once Arkham City was already revealed and it looked like no one would find it, Rocksteady told us that there was one specific wall in the game that could be blown up with three explosive charges. There was no other indication that this wall could be broken, which is why no one managed to find it. Once we had the clue, we found a secret room with the blueprints for Arkham City.

Wave Race: Blue Storm – Insulting announcer

A racer on a jetski in wave race.
Nintendo

Wave Race: Blue Storm was the last entry in this jetski series released in 2001 for the GameCube. Like any great racing game, it featured an announcer who would hype up the players and cheer them on as they raced and pulled off tricks. 9 years after the game came out, one fan discovered a code that would replace all the announcer’s dialogue with sarcastic comments. By inputting a specific button combination on the audio settings screen, you would start to hear lines like “Just because you’re going around in circles, doesn’t make you a big wheel” or “Your wins are like diamonds, kid…very rare.”

Halo: Reach – Community spotlight

Noble Team striking a pose.
Bungie

As the final Halo title developed by Bungie, the team made it a point to include an entire room of Easter Eggs to thank the passionate community. In the game’s final level, there’s a way to hit a secret button outside the bounds of the level to open a hidden door into what is known as the Tribute Room. Once inside, there are several terminals that can be accessed that detail some of the most popular fan projects and communities related to the series. These include Halo.Bungie.org, Red vs. Blue, Warthog Jump, and the developer’s forum moderation team. It is a fun way to see how much Bungie appreciates its community.

Jesse Lennox
Jesse Lennox has been a writer at Digital Trends for over four years and has no plans of stopping. He covers all things…
The best Mario characters of all time
The cast of Super Mario Party Jamboree.

We all know Mario, Luigi, Peach, Toad, and Bowser, but the best Mario games have expanded the cast of characters to a huge roster of friends and foes. Very few get their own games, but many do get invited to a few games of Mario Party or one of the many sports outings. Granted, even Mario's RPGs are light in terms of character building, but there are a few characters who manage to stand out with just a few lines or even just based on their designs. With over 30 years of games across console generations, we have looked back through to review and rank the absolute best Mario characters of all time.

The Mario franchise is not over, so there's always room for an upcoming Switch game to introduce a new character that breaks into this list.
10. Waluigi

Read more
The best video game villains of all time, ranked
Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury

We always establish some level of connection with our player character in games, but it is usually the villain who gets the most time in the spotlight. In many series, it is the villain who remains the constant while the hero changes, building up a rivalry that extends beyond the game itself. What makes a good villain can be a lot of things. They can be especially hard boss fights, have sympathetic goals and motivations, or are just so comically evil that we just love to see them on screen. We've been thwarting some villains since the NES generation, while others are more modern. No doubt we will find even more fantastic villains in upcoming video games, but for now, this is our ranking of the best video game villains of all time.
7. Dr. Wily

Dr. Wily deserves a spot on this list for being one of the first recurring villains on the NES. Each Mega Man game featured a unique cast of robot masters to fight, but the same mad scientist was always behind them going rogue. In the end, we always bested his robots, stormed his castle, and captured him (except for that one time when Mega Man was fed up with it all and tried to murder him). It was always world domination with Wily, and only because his partner got all the glory for their work in robotics. Neither his motivation or goals changed much from game to game, but fighting him at the end was always a treat with all the powers you'd coallected.
6. Bowser

Read more
The hardest levels in video game history
A bonfire burning with a sword in dark souls

Sometimes an entire video game can be hard, othertimes there are hard bosses, but then there are games where there's just one level that cranks up the challenge to unrealistic levels. It is natural for a game to get more difficult as you get further along, but sometimes that curve isn't as smooth as it should be. Or, in some cases, the game decides to change up the gameplay for a level. Whatever the reason, some levels have stood the test of time as being way too difficult for their own good. Even in the cases where the levels are technically fair, they still demand a level of perfection from the player to be considered fun. Here are the hardest levels in video game history we hope to never play again.
Alien "Auto"topsy part 3

It pains us to put a level from a game as great as The Simpsons Hit & Run on this list, but the final level just has every ingredient you need for a terrible level. The goal of this stage is to collect barrels of nuclear waste and deliver them to the UFO to blow it up. You're in a fast but not very responsive car, which is made worse by the fact that if you collide with almost anything while carrying a barrel, it explodes and you have to start over. Oh, and how about putting the mission on a timer? Yeah, you have a time limit on everything in this level, adding stress that only makes crashing more likely. If you don't know the ideal routes to take and get very lucky with traffic and controlling your car, it is next to impossible. This final level is the main reason most players have never beaten this otherwise amazing game.
The Dam level

Read more