You look at a single Skittle on a white surface, and it starts to move. The moment plays like telekinesis. It is not a visual trick on a screen. It is a live feed of real Skittles being nudged around in the real world.
Skittles Australia and Clemenger BBDO build this as a Facebook experience because, as the case frames it, only a small minority of fans engage with a brand’s page after liking it. The goal is to make “like” feel like a superpower, not a dead end.
The trick is not mind control. It is eye control
The mechanism is webcam tracking plus a physical rig. Your eye movements, captured via webcam, are translated into commands sent to Wi-Fi-controlled robots attached to Skittles, so the candy moves in response to where you look.
In social platforms, turning passive likes into active participation usually comes down to one thing. Give people an interaction loop that feels immediate, personal, and worth showing to someone else.
Why it lands
It creates a clean “I need to try this” reaction in seconds. The live camera feed removes skepticism, and the physical motion makes the experience feel bigger than a typical Facebook app. It also bakes in a share-worthy narrative: the fan is not consuming content. The fan is controlling a real object.
Extractable takeaway: If you want engagement rather than reach, stop asking for attention and start granting control. A tiny moment of viewer control, tied to a brand asset, can outperform bigger content drops because the audience feels like the protagonist.
What to steal for your next social activation
- Make the mechanic visible. Live proof beats claims. If the audience can see it is real, they trust it faster.
- Turn the brand into the interface. Here the “UI” is literally the product. That keeps the experience on-brand without extra messaging.
- Design for one-person amazement and second-person sharing. The first user is impressed. The second user wants to replicate it.
- Keep the loop short. Look. Move. React. Repeat. The faster the feedback, the longer people stay.
Campaign write-ups report that users spent an average of around four minutes interacting with the experience, and that page growth and app ranking spiked during the run.
A few fast answers before you act
What is Telekinize the Rainbow?
A Facebook experience that lets people move real Skittles through eye movements captured by a webcam, with the motion executed by Wi-Fi-controlled robotics.
Is it actually mind control?
No. The “telekinesis” framing is the story. The control signal is eye movement, translated by software into physical movement.
Why is the live webcam feed important?
It proves the effect is happening in real space, which makes the experience feel more magical and more credible than a purely on-screen interaction.
What is the main risk in copying this approach?
If setup friction is high or latency is noticeable, the illusion collapses. Experiences built on “power” need instant response to feel real.
