It all started with the IPO. Google used a funny string of numbers in its initial S-1 filing for how much it hoped to raise.
Then, a year later, Google collected a bit more than $4 billion by selling 14,159,265 million of its shares.
The search giant showed off its numerical whimsy again in 2011, when it bid $1,902,160,540 and $2,614,972,128 for some wireless patents.
In another auction, Google spent $25 million to buy the entire ".app" domain. But the clever part came when we followed up with the company about it.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe company has also responded to press questions with memes. It sent The Verge this one when it revealed that a weird skull showing up in people's Gmail accounts was caused by a bug in its own in-house debugger.
Google once even got a little risqué with this response.
And once it addressed an issue where Google Maps was showing Sauron's tower from "The Lord of the Rings" as appearing in Australia with a comment ... in Elvish.
"If your Elvish is a bit rusty, here is a rough translation," the representative said. "We encourage users to contribute their local knowledge and updates using Google Map Maker, even the whims of Sauron will not compromise our quest to provide useful and accurate maps."
Google has recruited new developers using super-cryptic challenges that people can only access through a secret website.
A few months after Google became Alphabet in 2015, it bought the entire alphabet as a domain name, with the URL abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz.com.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIn the same vein, Alphabet also bought back a bunch of stock for $5,099,019,513.59.
That's the square root of 26, the number of letters in the alphabet, times a billion.
Not about numbers, but pretty funny: In its official code of conduct, Google declares itself a "dog company"...
"Google's affection for our canine friends is an integral facet of our corporate culture," reads the company's code of conduct on its investor-relations site. "We like cats, but we're a dog company, so as a general rule we feel cats visiting our offices would be fairly stressed out."
... a fact that the company made sure to reference again in 2015 after the press noted that new parent company Alphabet didn't include Google's famous "don't be evil" line in its new code of conduct.
After The Wall Street Journal's Alistair Barr caught the change, the company sent him a cheeky response.
"Individual Alphabet companies may of course have their own codes to ensure they continue to promote compliance and great values," a Google spokesman said. "But if they start bringing cats to work, there's gonna be trouble with a capital T."
When a report surfaced from WWD earlier in 2017 that Google could potentially buy Condé Nast, Google's communications team took the opportunity to write a clever response.
While some people found Google's response pretty funny, WWD made a wisecrack of their own, responding: "Maybe they Googled how to write a witty response"