Notarealwebsiteyet [ Deluxe ]
As he typed, the website began to "materialize" in ways that defied physics. He wrote about a forest of glass trees, and a low hum vibrated through his desk. He wrote about a sky that rained liquid light, and his room grew unnaturally bright.
Most people would have closed the tab. But Leo noticed the favicon—a small, pixelated eye that seemed to blink in sync with his own. He opened the source code. Instead of standard HTML, he found lines of prose hidden in the metadata: notarealwebsiteyet
: Start with a "story seed"—a simple observation or a "What if?" question to spark the narrative [1, 16]. As he typed, the website began to "materialize"
The page was a stark, clinical white. In the center sat a single blinking cursor and a block of text: Most people would have closed the tab
: A visual, tappable format that works directly on the open web [11].
Leo was a digital archaeologist. While others looked for pottery in the desert, he looked for abandoned domains—ghosts of the early internet that refused to fade. One rainy Tuesday, he stumbled upon a URL that shouldn’t have existed: notarealwebsiteyet.com .
: Use a "logline" (1-3 sentences) to define what the story is about and what the audience will experience [10].




