“Eat this playlist” on Spotify is the name of a hidden mini‑game that turns one of your playlists into a retro Snake‑style game where the “food” is song covers from that playlist.

What “Eat This Playlist” Means

  • It is a game mode inside the Spotify mobile app, not a way of editing, deleting, or “merging” playlists.
  • The phrase means your snake “eats” the tracks from a chosen playlist by running into their little album-cover tiles on the screen.
  • As you eat more songs, the snake grows longer and the game gets harder, just like the classic Snake game from old phones.

How the Game Works

  • You pick a playlist, start “Eat this playlist,” then swipe up/down/left/right to steer a small line or triangle around the grid.
  • Each song you eat triggers that track to start playing in the background, and the next song appears as the new target on the grid.
  • If you crash into the borders or your own snake too many times, the run ends and you can restart to chase a higher score.

Where to Find It

  • Open the Spotify mobile app, choose a playlist, tap the three‑dot menu, and scroll to the bottom to look for “Eat this playlist.”
  • It only appears on certain versions of the mobile app, in selected regions, and typically requires a regular track playlist with enough songs (often 20 or more).
  • Many users report seeing it mainly on iOS and not on desktop or some Android setups, so availability can vary a lot by device and account.

Why People Talk About It Online

  • It became a trending topic because it’s a nostalgic throwback to Snake and a playful Easter egg inside a serious music app.
  • Forum and Reddit threads are full of people either flexing that they finally got the feature, or asking why they still don’t have it on their account.
  • Some users use it as a fun way to quickly discover tracks from big playlists and then add the ones they like to their Liked Songs from inside the game.

Quick FAQ

  • Does “eat this playlist” delete my playlist?
    No. It only uses the playlist as the level layout and song pool for the game.
  • Can I play with any playlist?
    You can usually use public playlists and your own playlists that meet the minimum track count, but not things like the raw Liked Songs list.
  • Is this the latest news about it?
    As of late 2024–2025, it’s still described as a hidden or limited feature, with users continuing to report staggered rollout and inconsistent availability.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.