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Blue Screen
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Red Screen
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Yellow Screen
Orange Screen
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Purple Screen
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FBI Lock Screen

Click to exit full screen mode, scroll your mouse wheel to adjust brightness.
BRIGHTNESS: 100/100

Prank and Fake Screens

Fake Blue Screen
Fake Windows Update
macOS Update
Matrix Rain
Hacker Terminal
White Noise for Sleep
FBI Lock Screen
Broken Screen
DVD Screensaver
Glitch Screen
Hacker Typer
Virus Screen Prank

FBI Lock Configurations

FBI Lock Screen Prank

A stern federal seal, an ALL-CAPS warning, and a computer that appears thoroughly confiscated. This fullscreen prank makes any machine look like it just became evidence - until Escape sets it free.

The Ten-Second Heart Attack

This prank works fast. Unlike a fake update that plays out over an hour, the FBI lock hits its victim in the first second - the seal, the warning, the sudden certainty that they should have read that terms-of-service agreement. Comedy gold, best served to people who will laugh about it.

Staging It Right

  1. Open this page on the target machine and click Preview
  2. Hide the cursor in a corner
  3. Be nearby for the reveal - this one deserves an audience

Keep It Kind

A scare prank needs a fast punchline. Reveal within moments, pick victims who enjoy a joke, and never run it on strangers, shared kiosks, or anyone mid-crisis. The goal is a shared laugh, not a genuine panic.

Obviously, It's Fake

This page has no connection to the FBI or any authority. Nothing is locked, scanned, reported, or transmitted - it is a static parody screen in a browser tab, and exiting fullscreen ends it completely. If you ever encounter a real browser lock demanding payment, that is a scam: close the tab and never pay.

Escalate the chaos with the virus screen, or slow-burn instead with the fake Windows update.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is my computer actually locked?

No. Nothing is locked, scanned, or reported - it is a static parody screen in a browser tab. Escape or a click ends it instantly.

Is the FBI lock prank legal to use on friends?

It is a parody screen for consensual pranks among friends. Use common sense: no strangers, no public kiosks, no genuine distress - and reveal the joke quickly.

What if I see a real FBI lock demanding payment?

That is a scam, full stop. Real law enforcement does not lock browsers or demand gift cards. Close the tab, run a malware scan, and never pay.

Why does this prank work so well?

Official symbols trigger instant, visceral reactions - the seal and the ALL-CAPS warning hit before rational thought catches up. That is also why the reveal should come fast.

Other useful links:

Screen Test | Keyboard Test | A Real Me | Stock Calculator | CPS Test | Coreball | Typing Test | Spacebar Test | Spacebar Clicker
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