Pagani’s website has a super geeky Easter egg and we love it

Pagani's website has a super geeky Easter egg and we love it

The Matrix knows you and that’s fine.

It is impossible to live a boring life. It’s not that the technical aspects of websites are boring. This is not the same as reading through a 30-page press release from an automaker announcing a “new” model with different headlights and an interior trim color. Even the most difficult jobs can have dull moments.

Sometimes those dull moments can be the source of divine inspiration. We present the Pagani secret supercar that you didn’t know existed, hidden on Pagani’s website.

This bit of ASCII art is not visible if you load Pagani’s site. This clever Easter egg is embedded on the page. The code remains in its original form. Although it isn’t something that most people will ever see, you can easily access it through any web browser by selecting the “view page source” function. It could be as easy as right-clicking your mouse or going into the settings for pages, depending on how you surf the web.

Pagani's website has a super geeky Easter egg and we love it

After you have found and executed the command, Pagani’s source code appears. Scroll down to see the outline of what appears to be a Huayra. It could also be a Zonda. have restrictions on the details of creating supercar cars with letters, numbers and text-based characters.

You can see that the code-car is different depending on which browser you use. Our exploration revealed that Chrome and Firefox have different colors. The image we see has different text than the one shared by allcarindex.com on Facebook. Our screencap, taken about an hour ago at the time of this posting, doesn’t exactly match. Pagani could be updating its clever Easter egg every so often? This is an entirely new level of geeky awesomeness.

Take a look and send us some photos. For inspiration, you can jump to our Pagani cars page for images of real-life Huayras.