Nickelodeon launched their first online component as part of the
America Online Kids Only channel in October 1995. Within a few years, a regular
World Wide Web site came online, and became a strong promotional tool for Nickelodeon. Nick.com also maintained a high level of respect for user privacy during the growth of the website. Before 2000, Nick.com's design was mainly images and
image maps allowing navigation through the website. Then, in June 2000, the website was expanded and redesigned with
Flash-animated buttons and advertisements. Nick.com's design has changed repeatedly since then, with the website's later designs making use of
sidebars,
web banners, and
Adobe Flash. In January 2000, developers started discussing expansion of Nick.com to make it an even more desirable website for children to visit. Mike Skagerlind, the website's general manager at the time said "But we felt strongly that it could be a lot more. We basically wanted it to be the main place that kids go to on the Web." On June 4, 2000, the website was redesigned. The interface was revamped and to make it more appealing to children and the most significant development was the use of
Flash for animated graphics and buttons. On September 28, 2009, Nickelodeon revamped the site with the institution of the new logo. In July 2014, Nickelodeon completely redesigned the site to match with the Nickelodeon app. It did not affect its sister channels' websites. In order to comply more with
COPPA, Nickelodeon removed the ability to create an account on March 31, 2016. The message boards were closed the same day. The
Nicktoons website also shut down around this time, replacing it with a page asking visitors to go to Nick.com. In December 2018, access via desktop computer to most sections of the site became limited, as links to watch episodes and play games on the site all redirected to a page asking viewers to download the network's mobile and tablet apps (both the network's app, along with separate game apps) for access to games and programming instead. Nick.com also discontinued making online games. This is likely due to
Google Chrome's changes that made access to
Adobe Flash (which the site was built on for years) difficult to non-existent in line with Flash's discontinuation during the end of 2020, requiring a large-scale rebuild of the desktop site that cannot be done behind the scenes. It is possible that access to programming and games for desktop visitors could be restored in some point in the near future, with all elements having full compatibility with
HTML5 standards. Production and distribution for Nickelodeon online games continued internationally until 2021. The last known Nickelodeon web game made before the redesign was "The Great Nickelodeon Escape". On December 17, 2020, the ability to watch full episodes on Nick.com was restored for pay TV subscribers in the United States, where one must
sign in to their TV provider to watch. On August 31, 2022, Nickelodeon restored access to online games on Nick.com after nearly four years, replacing all advertisements for mobile apps on the games section of the website. There were ten games available on Nick.com when access to online games was restored, including "Nickelodeon Lanes", a bowling game made in 2021, but was never officially released in America until this change to the website. The website was remodeled in 2023 with updated looks with the new 2023 logo change. On July 29, 2024, Nickjr.com was closed in order for a remodel of the main Nick.com website, with Nick Jr. becoming a section on Nick.com. On February 12, 2025, the international websites (except the UK, German, Latin American, Brazilian, Arabian, Indian, Canadian and Italian websites) were closed in favor of the Global page on this website. ==Features==