A very normal story about the future of American football.
The very normal sequel to the previous entry.
As the title suggests, explore all around the state of Nevada (and a few other places) with this collection of panoramas and virtual tours.
Follow one man’s journey to find heritage apple varieties and keep them from going extinct.
Archive of Our Own and Wattpad
Fanfiction (and some original works) galore!
Drift between recently posted YouTube videos, all with undescriptive titles and almost zero views…
Katie Tiedrich’s webcomic about video games that’s actually about video games.
The website of the insidious Bogleech themself, full of grossly grotesque horror, comedy, and horror comedy. Explore the RPG setting of Mortasheen, read the Awful Hospital webcomic, look at… Pokemon reviews, and more.
Welp. AO3 can apparently run Doom.
Scroll through a big collage of images found on old GeoCities pages.
In the 1940’s, a woman by the name of Frances Glessner Lee built a series of dioramas titled: “The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death.” This site tells the history of Lee and the impact she had on forensics, and it also includes interactive versions of 4 of Lee’s dioramas for you to explore. Keep in mind that these are not puzzles with solutions to be found, they are simply exercises to teach investigators how to identify potential evidence. (Note: These may be dioramas, but they’re dioramas that depict death scenes in incredible detail. They may be a bit graphic, so view at your own risk.)
The entirety of Julian Gough’s “End Poem,” formatting and all. Technically it was originally written for the ending of Minecraft, but it’s now fully in the public domain. Now it’s just the “End Poem.”
A live 24/7 channel of old, odd, and obscure media! This stuff gets weird.
A nautical 1840s ghost story about a landsman, second mate, and captain at sea on the whaleship Valor. This webcomic updates monthly.
A pretty accurate (perhaps too accurate) scale model of the solar system, where the entire scale is based on the moon being the size of 1 pixel.
A gritty sci-fi webcomic that seems pretty cool so far. (Note: it’s very gory in places and very nude in others. The website is also a tad bit eye-straining.)
Comics, art, and short stories by Sarah Jolley, creator of comics such as The Property of Hate, Duck Doodle Comics, and Doctor Who: Into the Inkwell. HIGHLY recommend the Doctor Who comic and the Great God Grove comics if you’re into either of those things.
Tracy J. Butler’s webcomic about gangster cats in Prohibition-era St. Louis. The comic does end unfinished after 174 issues (because it’s being adapted into an animated web series!!!), but it’s still absolutely worth the read.
LaStill is the 2046 industry standard of tools manufacturing! What? It’s not 2046 yet? Uh…don’t worry about that. Just join the waiting list and perhaps explore the website while you wait for your tools.
Webpage of the world’s longest-burning light bulb. The website itself has a lovely old internet charm to it, and among other things, you can watch a webcam of the lightbulb in action (and since it’s lit in a California fire station, you might catch the firefighters up to something as well.)
Get dropped into random neat places on Google Street View.
See what some of the animals at the Monterey Bay Aquarium are up to in a wide array of live cams set up in the enclosures! All cams run from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Pacific time, with occasional narrated feedings at the times designated on the live cam.
Read about the histories of failed products and innovations.
Channel surf through six decades' worth of retro TV and music.
A short experience that only works on a mobile phone in airplane mode. Also, yes there’s religious iconography but the experience itself is not religious in nature.
Ever wonder what’s going on at the beach? Check out not just one, but two webcam feeds at Panama City Beach, FL! (these are set up by/at a restaurant on the beach, btw; it’s not just some random person with a camera.)
Free, public domain eBooks, baby! Use them for school, use them for research, use them for fun, use them for pretty much whatever.
Originally set up as a student project, this webcam on San Francisco State University's campus is the world’s oldest running webcam feed. It’s mostly here for its historical significance, as the feed updates every 20 seconds, but it is interesting to check in every now and again to see if anything interesting is going on.
A cute little wordpress blog about vintage Barbie stuff. I really like mid-century fashion, so if you’re into that, mid-century graphic design, or just Barbie herself, I recommend checking this one out.
Cosplayer and Fallout aficionado Kate Aces travels to real-world locations around the Fallout: New Vegas map. Learn about the places you know and love and check out some pretty cool cosplay.
November 15, 1996. The classic Looney Tunes movie “Space Jam” is released. To promote it, a website full of activities for kids to explore is created. Decades later, the website is somehow still up in all its old internet glory. Come on and slam, dear user, and welcome to the jam.
ccFeelin’ down? Stop by the nicest place on the internet for a seemingly endless stream of virtual hugs from folks all around the world.
Running since 1927, the University of Queensland’s pitch drop experiment was made to prove that pitch is, in fact, a liquid. To date, only 9 drops have fallen, but the university has set up a webcam pointed at the experiment to catch when the 10th drop finally falls. Luckily for you, this webcam is freely available to view online!
An absolutely massive collaborative writing project wiki about the SCP Foundation, a clandestine organization that identifies, studies, and contains anomalous beings that don’t follow the laws of nature and threaten the sanity of humanity as we know it. SCP articles are written in a pseudo-academic format and are usually considered horror writing, but there’s an entire section of the wiki dedicated to joke articles (and since I’m a bit of a scaredy cat, the joke articles are where I spend most of my SCP time.)
Another massive collaborative writing project wiki, this time centering around a pocket dimension library that contains every book that’s ever been, will be, and never be written. The general tone of the website is far more magical and whimsical than the scientific horror vibes of the SCP Foundation (its sister site.)
I didn’t want to put UQuiz itself on here for reasons, but I’m making an exception for this. The Wizard Maze UQuiz is not a quiz… It’s an experience. So, can you find your way out of the wizard maze?
Get lost reading about tropes in the all-devouring pop culture wiki!
Another webcam livestream for the list. This is exactly what it sounds like; one “Mr. Grass” put up a webcam facing their yard for you to watch the grass grow (and any other yard-related shenanigans that may occur!)
Welcome Home and AwayFromPryingEyes
A multimedia horror project following the search for a forgotten 70s puppet show called “Welcome Home.” The first link belongs to the in-universe Welcome Home Restoration Project and is mostly full of charming WH media they’ve found, while the second link belongs to someone named W and documents WH-related anomalies they’ve run into. (Note: Both sites occasionally go down for updates. If that happens, wait a few days and then try again.)
Sure, I’ll put an entire podcast here. Listen to Kevin Perjurer (of Defunctland fame) and Jack (from Theme Parks Shouldn’t Exist) talk about the nicheist, sometimes only tangentially theme park-related topics. (Person of the Century and 50’s Prime Time Café are my favorite episodes so far.)
It’s just good old Wikipedia! Well…except for the fact that everything is written in Old English.
Discover random Wikipedia pages in a format similar to a TikTok feed.