YOU FOUND A
DUCK.
They were supposed to be decorative. Simple. Harmless. But they keep appearing in places they shouldn't be. Places we didn't put them. Places that don't make sense.
We're documenting the phenomenon. We need your help.
If you've found one, you're part of this now.

Every participant plays a role in the network.
CHOOSE YOUR ROLE
A real-world network powered by physical units and tracked interactions.
HOW THE NETWORK WORKS
Units Are Deployed
Members and operators place units (ducks) into circulation through locations, machines, and direct placement.
Units Are Found
People discover units in the real world and interact with them.
Sightings Are Reported
Users log sightings through the platform, tracking movement and activity.
The Network Grows
Each interaction expands the system, increasing visibility, engagement, and demand.
LIVE
NETWORK ACTIVITY
Unit reported – East Haven, United States – 8h ago
Deployment completed – 40 units
New node activated – Miami Beach
Unit reported – Milford, United States – 15h ago
Deployment completed – 70 units
New node activated – Guilford
Unit reported – Guilford, United States – 27d ago
Deployment completed – 100 units
New node activated – Milford

WHAT WE KNOW
Specimen designation: Rubber Waterfowl (Origin Unknown).
Composition: Rubber. Appearance: Yellow. Harmlessness: Presumed.
Behavior: Unexplained. They appear in locations we did not place them. They persist. The pattern is unclear.
- They keep appearing.
- We keep documenting.
- No one has an explanation.
PARTICIPATION PROTOCOLS
Found one? Upload a photo. We'll automatically detect your location and add it to the observation log.
TRENDING OBSERVATIONS
Most-liked sightings from our community observers

Guilford, United States
2/2/2026, 1:26:08 AM
LIVE OBSERVATION FEED
Recent sightings. Locations. Behavior notes. They're everywhere.