neal.fun definitely deserves a mention.
These games also have a similar feel:
Paper Trader
Guess The Year
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neal.fun definitely deserves a mention.
These games also have a similar feel:
Paper Trader
Guess The Year
Welp, already spent way too much time on neal.fun! Great stuff!
Got a few:
https://everynoise.com/ You can find A LOT of music genres here. Genres next to eachother resemble one another. Figure out what you like, and what genres are close to it. Clicking on the >> will take you to artists in this genre, or search for artists in the upper right corner and see what genre they fall under.
https://clickclickclick.click This one is about privacy, see what a browser can track. If you don't know much about pixeltracking, this one is a fun way to learn (and a little creepy hehe)
https://suno.com/create Create your own songs with an AI, just throw in lyrics, a genre, and you are done. A fun way to troll a friend by throwing in an old conversation
https://darknetdiaries.com/ Haven't looked into this one myself, but these are true stories on the darknet, recommended by a friend of mine.
Darknet Diaries is a podcast, rather than just a website. It’s not all about the darknet, he does tons of stories about internet security and penetration testing.
I have listened to every single episode. It’s EXCELLENT.
Came here to post EveryNoise. Absolutely incredible site that just fucking WORKS. Can't believe I went as long as I did without knowing about it.
Clickclickclick is such a great eye opener. And I'll definately will spend some time searching artists I like on Everynoise. Other two also added to my bookmarks for later viewing. Great links!
I don't know if it's "lesser known" but I discovered boardgamearena.com last year and I've been addicted ever since.
It's free, but there is a premium membership that gives some extra perks.
Hundreds of boardgames that you can play with others online, from rummy and checkers to Wingspan and Catan.
They offer casual matchmaking and ranked competitive modes and tournaments.
Set up an account and invite me to your favorite game! I would love to learn it! You can figure out my username on there.
BGA is fantastic. Free game selection is always growing. Membership, if you want to pay for the premium games, is a fantastic deal. Only one person in your playgroup needs a membership for everyone to play. The interface for most games is WAY better than actually playing in person and games are so much faster too. It's not as good as hanging out in person with friends, but it's damn close.
I miss the old Yahoo games site where during night shift you could play Canasta with probably some retired folks from the other side of the world
I like single purpose concept websites that don't do anything. They're the opposite of the modern internet that values engagement above all. They communicate exactly one thing once and though you never have to go back, you're always glad that they're there.
Feel like you are really under selling all that zombo can do
Anything is possible... At Zombo com
So true! I hereby retract that antizombo slander
It’s not what zombocom can do, it’s what you can do at zombocom.
Zombo is great. In the 10 minutes I spent there I hung the laundry, bought weekly groceries, painted my living room, got married twice, got elected minister of foreign affairs of Belgium, made first contact with 4 different alien spaces and then evolved into a whole new life form that exists in 4d space. Good site.
I like single purpose concept websites that don’t do anything.
Aye matey.
https://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/
When I discovered this website, I started obsessively relacing all my shoes.
Archive.org has many facets:
Wayback Machine
Internet Arcade
Feature Films
NASA Images
Multiple Image collections
Live Music Archive
Free Audiobook Collection
Open Library
American Libraries
How stuff works is amazing.
Wikipedia should not need to be mentioned.
It's a pretty simple concept with a lot of references, but Floor796 is fun to browse around when I'm bored. There's a few interactive bits too, if you can find them.
What do you call these? Feel like I've seen this animated and printed a bunch of times in my life.
As far as art style goes, I'm not sure to be honest. Based on the artist's YouTube page of their drawing process, it seems akin to making something in Paint.
In general, I guess you could call it slice of life? iirc the "floor" is supposed to be on a spaceship, just showing the day to day activities.
Wiby, particularly the "surprise me" option is great for old school sites and that StumbleUpon feeling!
It is far from lesser known, but my favorite standalone site is still Atlas Obscura.
futilitycloset.com/
Futility Closet is a collection of entertaining curiosities in history, literature, language, art, philosophy, and mathematics, designed to help you waste time as enjoyably as possible.
If you want an excuse to visit random coordinates around you geohashing.site is a interesting option. Each day everyone is given the same set of spots to go to, with optional challenges and badges one can do. Its quite surprising how strong the community has been going despite it's age.
Here's one of my long time favorites:
What a treasure trove! At first glance I love all the ASCII art. But some of the texts feel like you're browsing some old Reddit/4chan posts. Will take me a while to get through all the gems!
https://www.testufo.com/#test=framerates
Use it to see how new monitors are doing. Mostly a toy but I like it.
Blue's News - Video Gaming, Technology and General Interest. I think it's been around since the mid 90s.
I miss old StumbleUpon! It was great for this. Someone recently introduced me to Flashpoint Archive and I have a hunch that there's a bunch of good stuff there.
Ooh yeah, the Flashpoint Archive is an amazing resource! I've dabbled in it before. Great blast from the past!
This question reminded me of 27b/6, a website with a collections of essays and email exchanges from the author that are like humourous, satirical and based on his life. I had a lot of fun reading them years ago and I remember that it was dormant for a while but coming back it seems to have new material.
It's a map site that helps you identify places around the world. Google maps is so commerce-focussed, Open Street Map often lacks an explanation of what something is.
But it clearly has issues such as not licensing the background options so it has watermarks and popups.
Opentripmap.com is similar, but is probably just OSM data.
Wikimapia is great for "what's that wierd marking in the desert"-type questions.
https://rabbit-rabbit.quest/ selects a random location for you to visit every day within walking/cycling distance.
I couldn't think of many less visited sites I usually go to often, but coalregion(dot)com is an interesting site I found using this Wiby search engine a long time ago. It's a site about a region in Pennsylvania. They have a section for recipes supposedly from that region along with a section for words/slang from that regions past. They got other things, but the dictionary and recipes interest me more than the other parts.
She's gone Ralf, she's gone. Let her go.
I felt that in my soul.
yucata.de is an online-play boardgame website.
Fully DIY and community built site. Free accounts and free play, although donations are accepted.
Fun small games to start with:
Port Royal, Mountain Goats, Spexxx, Ali Baba, Balloon Cup, Dragonheart, Rose King, Pompeii.
And some quality bigger games:
Bruges, Innovation, Targi, Chakra, Stone Age, Grand Austria Hotel, Imhotep, Finca, Carcassonne South Seas, Thurn & Taxis.
Vimm's Lair
Z2
A bunch of webcomics
Whoa, Vimm's lair is amazing! I especially like that they also have scans of manuals from old games. I'm still missing some in my collection.
Z2 is kind of hard to find with Google. Do you mean z2comics?
sci-news.com is pretty great for science news from a wide variety of fields.
Someone on Lemmy posted a link to https://corru.observer a week or two ago, and I'm really enjoying the game.
Metafilter is a wonderful weblog, and I also read Canlii, which is a legal case website which is a wonderful rabbit hole to fall down to learn about how legal decisions are made.