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Once inside, the player is treated to text that reads, “Created by Warren Robinett.” Robinett added the secret area at a time when creator credits weren’t included in games like they are today. It’s from this secret area that the term “Easter egg” was coined in any capacity for video games. Since then, thousands of games have included Easter eggs of various types, and many people know of Adventure’s role regarding the history of video games, but it’s not actually the first Easter egg ever coded into a game, as that occurred seven years earlier.
Video Game Easter Eggs Date Back to 1973

While the term “Easter egg” wasn’t applied to a video game until 1980’s Adventure, the first instance of what would become known as an Easter egg came in 1973’s Moonlander. There were several similar moon landing games released throughout the 1970s, including Lunar Lander, which appeared in arcades and on home consoles. Moonlander was distributed alongside DEC computers, so it had a comparatively smaller audience when compared to later commercial games. Regardless, the very first Easter egg can be found in Moonlander, and it’s a challenging one to find because you have to land in just the right spot.
If you manage to lower your lander perfectly, the astronaut departs, walks over to a large “M,” representing a McDonald’s restaurant, and orders “Two cheeseburgers and a Big Mac to go.” The joke at the time was that McDonald’s was popping up everywhere, and before long, they’d be on the Moon. You could say the same thing about Starbucks today, but in 1973, it was McDonald’s. If you didn’t land just right and instead crashed directly into the McDonald’s, the game delivered a message reading, “You clod. You’ve destroyed the only McDonald’s on the Moon.”









