Have you seen this file before? Drop a comment below or find me on the Mastodon retro tag. Tags: #AfterDark #Screensaver #Creepypasta #RetroComputing #MPG #LostMedia
For the first 30 seconds, nothing happens. Then, a pixelated, green Snake (the Nibbles variant) appears. But it doesn’t move toward an apple. It just... sits there.
I have no idea. But Arkafterdark - Snake 1.mpg is now living rent-free in my nightmares. It’s the uncanny valley of shareware. Arkafterdark - Snake 1.mpg
Posted by RetroRogue on April 16, 2026
There are some files you download from an old, dusty external hard drive that make you nostalgic. And then there are files that make you deeply confused. Today, we’re looking at the latter: . Have you seen this file before
At 0:45, the "Snake" suddenly stretches into the shape of the classic After Dark "Flying Toasters." The toasters fly across the screen, but instead of toast, they are launching little pixelated snake segments.
By 1:20, the video glitches hard. The text "ARK AFTER DARK" flashes in white block letters, followed by a single line of code: SNAKE.EXE NOT FOUND: INSERT COIN TO CONTINUE Then it cuts to black. Then, a pixelated, green Snake (the Nibbles variant) appears
If the name didn’t tip you off, this isn’t your average screen recording.
Is this a creepypasta? A failed art school project from 1999? Or just a corrupted file where someone renamed a screensaver hack?
This is not high art. Shot in what looks like 240p resolution, the .mpg file opens on a black background. No audio—just the whirring hum of what sounds like a dying CRT monitor.
I found this buried in a folder labeled “Random_Backup_2003” on a thrifted hard drive. The filename immediately triggers two neurons: Arkafterdark (a clear nod to the classic After Dark screensaver suite from the 90s) and Snake (the Nokia phone classic).