IN PHOTOS: Explore these 5 quirky websites to unwind and have fun
Updated On: 25 May, 2026 01:46 PM IST | Nascimento Pinto
From making digital cold coffees to pixel horses, these delightfully weird websites are proof that the Internet can still be playful, pointless, and oddly wonderful (Story by Junisha Dama)

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A museum for the ’90s babies
This is the Internet Museum your inner 2000s child deserves. Built using fragments from archived GeoCities pages between 1994 and 2009, Cameron’s World is an archaeological dig through the old Internet. Back in the day, GeoCities allowed ordinary people to build their own weird little corners online. Cameron’s World stitches together pieces from over 38 million archived pages into one giant nostalgic fever dream.
Log on to: cameronsworld.net
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One for the lo-fi heads
This one’s part productivity app, part tiny animated universe. Lo-fi Town lets you create a cosy pixel-art room where tiny animated people study, nap, water plants, or stare out rainy windows while lo-fi music plays in the background. But beneath the cute aesthetics is a surprisingly useful toolkit: pomodoro timers, task lists, habit trackers, and ambient radio stations.
Log on to: lofi.town

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A pop culture maze
Imagine Where’s Waldo? directed by someone raised entirely online. Floor796 is one giant animated cross-section packed with anime characters, retro games, memes, musicians, movie references, and tiny interactive secrets. Built to have multiple rooms, where a pop culture reference is waiting to happen. Click around and you’ll stumble into mini-games, hidden quests, pixel-art tools, playable instruments, fake ads, and bizarre little Easter eggs. It feels like Tumblr, Newgrounds, Cartoon Network, and your childhood desktop all merged into one hyperactive universe.
Log on to: floor796.com
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Turning the home into a café
This recreates the ambience of a coffee shop down to alarming detail. You can customise sounds of espresso machines, rain outside, low chatter, chairs scraping, and crockery clinking. Suddenly your bedroom in Mumbai feels like a moody café in Berlin. People use it while studying, pretending to work, or staring dramatically at Google Docs.
Log on to: imissmycafe.com

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Chal mere ghode, tik tik tik
You draw a horse — badly, preferably — and send it galloping into a digital landscape populated by horses doodled by strangers around the world. There’s something oddly beautiful about seeing your chaotic little horse run alongside hundreds of others.
Log on to: gradient.horse
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