Best Facebook Easter Eggs
On the way to becoming an unstoppable social media behemoth, Facebook slipped a lot of wacky stuff onto its website. These are the best tricks Facebook has pulled, past and present.
Current Status: In full effect! But they are not compatible with Facebook Graph Search
What It Does: This one started with users noticing that if they typed @[4:0] into a comment or wall post, it would change it to "Mark Zuckerberg." As it turns out, that's Facebook's way of calling usernames, and it works for any number. (Zuckerberg came on as user #4, after three test profiles.)
If you want to find the number that calls out your own name, just go to your profile page and, in the url, replace "www" with "graph." You should end up with something that looks like this, with the number on the second line.
Current Status: Still going.
Try It Yourself Here:
Leave a comment below to see it work in action:
- You can use any numbers, just use this format @*[684:0]
- Don’t forget to remove the * so in reality it will look like: @[684:0]
- After posting it should convert to a name!
Current Status: Sadly, they've changed their file system since then.
5. The Severed Head of Christopher Putnam
Current Status: Going strong.
6. The Chat Thumbnail

What It Does: If you put a username between double brackets in Facebook chat (like so: [[NunoRicardoDaSilva]]), it will magically transform into that person's thumbnail pic. It hasn't evolved into an emoji-substitute quite yet, but we've got high hopes.
Current Status: Alive and well.
7. The Quotes

What It Does: On the first few redesigns, if you scrolled to the bottom of nearly any page, you'd find either a cryptic reference to quails or a line from Top Gun in fine print — just what you'd expect from a nerdy 20-year-old.
Current Status: These were part of what defined Facebook as a college thing — so not surprisingly, they didn't live to see 2009.
8. The Konami Code
What It Does: This one goes back to the most famous easter egg of all, the Konami Code. On early incarnations of Facebook, those fateful ten keystrokes would call up a lens flare effect that moved around as you scrolled.
Current Status: Sadly, this one went out with the tabbed browser page in 2009.

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