
Companies hide these pieces of information in different types of media for various reasons such as inside jokes, secret features, or hidden messages from the development team.įor instance, an old Google Maps hidden joke was a cute reference to the Lord of the Rings saga. In fact, people have been hiding little secrets in their creations as long as people can remember. Increase your chances with 20+ banks and lendersĮaster eggs in apps aren’t a new thing.

But hey, this is a pretty satisfying finish to an odd story. Don’t the names sound entertaining? It will disappear soon coz Easter eggs are no fun when pointed out.”įurthermore, she also said that the company is looking for editors. That’s our training ground for new editors. “Guys, you can stop trying to post here about the supposed ‘Waze Mystery’ now. A certain Ada Cap on Waze Philippines Facebook page finally broke silence regarding the “Waze Mystery” fiasco. Weird, right? Ano ba talaga Waze?īefore you put your tinfoil hats on and start spewing nonsense like flat earth theories, there is an end to downright bizarre story. However, the app just kept on loading and it didn’t give us a way to access the freakish villages. To test if you can actually use the navigation app to make it to the said villages, we tried to pin “To Perdition” as our destination. Same routes, same structures-it seems like Waze lifted off the same town and laid it out in another mountainous region. Not just in Quezon?īut it doesn’t end there: the same cross-shaped village can be found in Leyte, just east of Ormoc City. Want a dose of existential dread? This bizarre village has a park-like destination called “Where Dreams Die.” Meanwhile, not far from the pessimistic waypoint is a road called “To Perdition,” which comes to a dead end. There’s even a condominium there called “Dala Ka Ng Fuds Condominium” and we highly discourage you from doing so, unless you want to get beaten to a pulp. Meanwhile, others were parodies of existing institutions like LOGO Motel, Puresilver, and Jollibear Drive-Thru, among others. One location there says Mababang Paaralan ng Chuva Cthulu, a charming reference to the Lovecraftian elder god and Jolina Magdangal. To make things more Twilight Zone– esque, the structures in these atypical villages were even more insane. (Read: 6 Very Pinoy Features We Wish Waze Had) ‘Dala ka ng fuds‘ to these locations Meanwhile, some of the most innocent ones Others weren’t so kindly such as the streets of Ungas and Kamote, an obvious jab to our favorite unruly drivers. There are parallel roads named after books in the Bible while others bear colors as names. Think strange cities in what are supposed to be forested areas are unsettling? It just gets better-and more anomalous.įurther zooming to the crosses will reveal the names of the thoroughfares there. (Read: Waze Tags Philippine Roads As World’s Worst – Again) Streets with names from the Bible While the shapes are weird enough as they are, what cranks the whole affair up to eleven is that the city-wide crosses are mapped in the middle of a vast mountainous forest area shared between the provinces of Rodriguez and Antipolo in Rizal and General Nakar in Quezon. De Ocampo said that based on the scale, the strange road maps appear to be as big as cities. While these odd map markers seem innocuous at a glance, zooming in will reveal a weirder story.īy zeroing in on the anomalous images on Waze, he found out that the three crosses reveal that they have identical roads, only differing in size.

Somewhere in the province of Quezon right on the left side of Polilio Strait, de Ocampo found weird cross-shaped markings that are identical to one another. In a Facebook post by user Howie Layug de Ocampo, he pointed out some strange locations on the social navigation app Waze.

User Discovers Strange Identical Cities, Yellow Brick Roads, And Other Easter Eggs On Waze Map 4 min read By eCompareMo on JanuWaze is a motorist’s best friend. Also, it can be a useful tool for uncovering top-secret locations hiding in our midst.
