Last updated: April 2025
Nobody visits a snake game website to read a privacy policy. I get that. So I'll keep this as short and plain as possible — no legal jargon, no walls of fine print. Just a straightforward explanation of what snakgame.com collects, what it doesn't, and why. If you have questions after reading it, my email is at the bottom.
Snak Game does not collect your name, email address, or any personal information. There is no account to create. There is no login. You open the site, you hit Play, you play the snake game. That's it. Nothing about you as a person is stored anywhere on this site.
Like every website on the internet, snakgame.com receives some basic technical information when your browser loads the page. This is standard stuff — it's not something I manually review, and it's not tied to you personally. It helps me understand whether the site is working and how people are generally using it.
This includes things like:
None of this is linked to who you are. Think of it as anonymous, aggregated data — the kind that tells me "600 people visited from Texas today" rather than anything about a specific person. I can't identify you from it, and I'm not trying to.
Yes, snakgame.com uses cookies. These are not the kind that track you across other websites or build advertising profiles on you. They're functional cookies — small bits of data that help the site remember basic preferences between visits — and analytics cookies that count traffic so I know the site is actually being used.
If you'd rather not have cookies at all, you can turn them off in your browser settings. The snake game itself will still run fine. You might lose a saved preference or two between sessions, but nothing important breaks.
Snakgame.com uses Google Analytics. This is a free tool from Google that shows me traffic patterns — how many people visited, which pages they spent time on, what devices they used, and where they came from geographically. It helps me understand what's working and what needs to be improved.
Google Analytics collects data anonymously. I see numbers and trends, not names or identities. If you want to understand exactly how Google handles that data, their full policy is at policies.google.com/privacy. If you'd like to opt out of Google Analytics tracking entirely across all websites, Google provides a browser add-on for that at tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout.
Snakgame.com may display ads to help keep the site running and free for everyone. Ad networks may use cookies to show ads that are relevant to your general interests based on your browsing activity. I don't control which specific ads appear — that's handled by the ad network. If you'd prefer not to see personalized ads, most major ad networks have an opt-out option in their own settings. You can also use a browser extension like uBlock Origin if you'd rather see no ads at all.
If snakgame.com links to another site, that site has its own privacy policy, and I have zero control over what happens once you leave. It's worth checking the privacy policy of any site you visit, especially if it asks for personal information. I can only speak to what happens here.
The snake game is fun for all ages, and a lot of kids play it. Snakgame.com does not knowingly collect any information from children under 13. Since we don't collect personal information from anyone, this is fairly simple — there's nothing to gather in the first place. Parents can feel comfortable letting their kids play here. There's no chat, no account, no data entry of any kind.
If you're based in California, you have rights under the CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act) regarding how your data is used. Since snakgame.com doesn't sell personal data and doesn't collect identifying information, most of this is already covered by default. If you have a specific question about your rights or want to confirm what (minimal) data may be associated with your visit, reach out and I'll answer you directly.
Players in other US states with privacy legislation in effect — Virginia, Colorado, Texas, and others — are similarly covered. The same simple reality applies: no personal data is collected, stored, or sold.
Since snakgame.com doesn't store personal data, there's very little to protect in the traditional sense. The site runs over HTTPS, which encrypts the connection between your browser and the server. Standard stuff, handled properly.
If anything changes about how snakgame.com handles data, this page gets updated. The "last updated" date at the top always reflects the most recent version. Nothing changes quietly — if the policy is updated, the date changes and the relevant section will reflect what's different.
Got a question about this policy, noticed something that doesn't look right, or just want to reach a real person? Email me directly at contactmu97@gmail.com. One person runs this site and one person reads the emails. I'll get back to you.