Google Added 23 AR Creepy Crawlies to Its 3D Animals Search Collection

If you’re a huge fan of little critters, crawlies, and insects that fly and buzz in general, you can now freely enjoy them in AR right on your smartphone as Google added 23 insects to its 3D animal collection on Google Search.

The 23 newly added insects are available on devices that support ARCore, a software development kit developed by Google that allows to build AR apps.

How to check out AR insects on Google?

To see AR creepy crawlies on your smartphone, open Google Search or google.com in your browser and type the name of a bug you wish to see. As in the case with other AR objects, animals, and dinosaurs, find the big card with the “View in 3D” button, and you’re all set.

Google “Revived” Dinosaurs Through Augmented Reality
Google, together with Universal Brand Development, Amblin Entertainment and Ludia, transferred ten dinosaurs of the famous Jurassic World franchise directly to Google search.

Once you’ve clicked that button, you can view a 3D version of a given insect. You can enlarge it, rotate it, flip it around, and observe it from all angles. Android users can also hear the sounds the insect makes, like buzz or hornet hovering. Another option is to tap “View in your space” to place beetles, moths, cicadas, and fireflies in your room or outdoors on any surface.

Android users are required to have Android 7.0 OS or later, and iOS users are required to have iOS 11.0 or later, so make sure you are up-to-date to learn about AR stags, hornets, and ladybugs.

Here’s the list of the butterflies, beetles, and cicadas you can now view in 3D:

Image: Google | These are the 23 insects you can now view on Google Search
  1. Atlas beetle
  2. Atlas moth
  3. Brown cicada
  4. Dragonfly
  5. Evening cicada
  6. Firefly
  7. Giant stag
  8. Grasshopper
  9. Hercules beetle
  10. Hornet
  11. Jewel beetle
  12. Ladybug
  13. Mantis
  14. Miyama stag beetle
  15. Morpho butterfly
  16. Periodical cicada
  17. Robust cicada, a.k.a. Hyalessa maculaticollis
  18. Rosalia batesi
  19. Rhinoceros beetle
  20. Shining ball scarab beetle, a.k.a Leiodidae
  21. Stag beetle
  22. Swallowtail butterfly
  23. Walker’s cicada, a.k.a. Meimuna opalifera