Arthur tried to Alt+F4. The keyboard was dead. On the screen, his avatar began to change. Its face started cycling through photos of Arthur himself—snapshots from his social media, his ID badge, a grainy webcam shot from three minutes ago.
"You’re early for the update," the Hatter’s voice—a flat, text-to-speech drone—vibrated through Arthur’s headset. "Build 10431605 isn't for users. It’s for the data that refuses to be deleted." Download Bing in Wonderland Build 10431605
Arthur watched in horror as the file size of the game on his hard drive began to grow. 10GB... 50GB... 500GB. It wasn't downloading data anymore; it was consuming it. His documents, his photos, his OS—everything was being "indexed" into the Wonderland. Arthur tried to Alt+F4
He found the "Mad Hatter" in a clearing. The character wasn't a man, but a flickering collage of every image result for the word "eccentric." Its face started cycling through photos of Arthur
Arthur typed Home . The screen flickered, and the game world rendered—not as a forest or a castle, but as a distorted landscape made of indexed image results. The sky was a mosaic of stock photos of clouds, watermarked and repeating. The ground was a carpet of blue hyperlinks that crunched like dry leaves when his avatar moved.
Arthur, a digital historian, clicked download. He expected a weird promotional game from the early 2010s—perhaps a reskinned platformer meant to boost search engine metrics. But when the progress bar hit 100%, his cooling fans didn’t spin down. They screamed.
The file appeared on an archived mirror site, sandwiched between broken drivers and forgotten shareware: Bing_in_Wonderland_B10431605.zip .