Skip to main content

The next big first-person shooter of the year: Google Maps?

For those that have spent more time that they would care to admit on Google Maps’ street view, this is for you. So say you are exploring your neighborhood on Google Maps, just wandering around being suitably impressed with the technology that lets you see a good chunk of the real world thanks to more actual photos than anyone sane could count. You turn a corner and smile with appreciation as you recognize a familiar block. Then you take out an assault rifle and open fire.

If this sounds appealing, then this new viral ad campaign, may be for you. Or you should seriously seek medical attention.

The idea is simple enough. You enter Google Maps street view mode (via a specific website), navigate your way around, and occasionally let loose a few rounds with the M4A1. Thankfully, the effect is little more than a few rounds of fire with sound effects. You can aim at the photos of people, but it won’t make any changes to the image. So it isn’t like you can go on an actual rampage, just a partial rampage for a PG crowd.

Battlefield Google, aka Google Shoot View, comes to us from the Dutch ad firm, Pool. They also released an ad to go with it, which you can see below.

The tagline reads: “Explore the beauty of the world’s cities, towns and villages through 360-degree street-level imagery… and fire a M4A1 assault rifle.”

The campaign is either genius, or criminally insane. Someone, somewhere is like going to be offended by the idea of allowing people to simulate firing a rifle into a group of people, but until then, it is an interesting viral campaign that definitely caught the attention of many.

Topics
Ryan Fleming
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ryan Fleming is the Gaming and Cinema Editor for Digital Trends. He joined the DT staff in 2009 after spending time covering…
Digital Trends Live: Google Maps update, Apple Watch sales, and more
episode 310 google maps 15 years redesign 0

On this episode of Digital Trends Live, hosts Greg Nibler and Ryan Waniata discuss the biggest-trending stories in tech, including a major update to Google Maps, Apple Watch sales outpacing the Swiss watch industry, neural network 4K upscaling, rocket talk, and more.

We then turn to the world of gaming, where Lisa Marie Segarra, DT's gaming editor,  joins us from our New York studios to talk about the effects of the coronavirus on Nintendo Switch production. She also discusses the 20th anniversary of The Sims.
Vlad Panchenko

Read more
Ubisoft confirms Assassin’s Creed remakes are in the works
Basim perched on a ledge overlooking Baghdad

In a company interview with CEO Yves Guillemot posted on the Ubisoft website Thursday, the executive reveals that there are remakes of Assassin's Creed games in the works, although he doesn't specify which ones.

"Players can be excited about some remakes, which will allow us to revisit some of the games we've created in the past and modernize them," he says, implying that it could pertain to games made before Odyssey. "There are worlds in some of our older Assassin's Creed games that are still extremely rich."

Read more
Surfaced patent shows what an Xbox streaming console would’ve looked like
An Xbox Series X sits next to both Series S models.

There have been a few Xbox devices that have never come to fruition, one of which was Keystone, a prototype for an affordable game streaming device you could hook up to your TV or monitor. Thanks to a surfaced patent, we've gotten an even closer look at what it would've potentially looked like.

The patent, first spotted by Windows Central, gives us a more complete view of the device. We've previously seen the Keystone in the flesh. Microsoft Gaming head Phil Spencer is known for hiding teases and interesting collectibles on the shelf in his office. In a 2022 X (formerly Twitter) post congratulating Bethesda on Fallout's 25th anniversary, you can see a small white device on the top shelf that's actually a Keystone prototype. Xbox told Digital Trends that it was a version of the device made before it decided to "refocus our efforts on a new approach.”

Read more