Google Celebrates Popularity Of Bubble Tea
Today, Google is making a cute and interactive doodle to show how Popularity Of Bubble Tea is all over the world. Bubble tea is a non-alcoholic cold tea drink that is also called boba tea and pearl milk tea. The name comes from the way the tapioca pearls, which look like bubbles in the drink, look like they are made of jelly. During the Covid-19 pandemic, the drink got a lot of attention, especially from Gen-Z and millennials.
Google has chosen January 29 Popularity Of Bubble Tea because it was announced on this day in 2020 that the famous drink would get its own emoji.
Google Celebrates Popularity Of Bubble Tea Through Interactive Doodle https://t.co/S9WX5pOKHz pic.twitter.com/AVvpeQbMPc
— NDTV News feed (@ndtvfeed) January 29, 2023
To honour the sweet and sour drink, Google has made a fun, interactive doodle that lets people make their own milk teas and run their own shops. Users only have to click on the doodle, and an animation will start playing on the screen. Netizens play as a Formosan Mountain Dog who runs a bubble tea stand in the middle of a rainy forest in the interactive doodle. In the game, making tea is easy. All the player has to do is fill the cup with each ingredient, like milk and boba balls, until they reach a certain line.
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Before the shop closes for the day, players will have to complete five orders, each one getting harder than the last. When each drink is done, the customers line up their straws and poke them through the lid.
The doodle page says, “Satisfy your hunger and make a delicious cup of bubble tea with today’s interactive Doodle, which features Taiwan’s native Formosan Mountain Dog and a group of familiar Doodle characters!”
Google wrote on its Doodle page about the origins of the drink, “This Taiwanese drink started out as a local treat, but over the last few decades, it has become very popular. Traditional Taiwanese tea culture, which goes back to the 17th century, is where Popularity Of Bubble Tea comes from. But bubble tea as we know it today didn’t come into being until the 1980s.”
It went on to say, “Waves of Taiwanese immigrants have brought this drink to other countries over the past few decades, and the original bubble tea keeps getting better. Shops all over the world are still trying out new tastes, ingredients, and combinations. Traditional tearooms in Asia have also joined the boba trend, which has spread to places like Singapore, Japan, South Korea, and more!”