MicroFish
Advanced Analytics for Fisheries Professionals
: Created by Ricardo Cabello (Mr.doob), the project was a landmark for Chrome Experiments , proving that modern browsers could handle complex 2D physics engines like Box2D in real-time. Why It’s a Classic
If you remember the early days of Chrome Experiments, you probably know this one. Built by developer google gravity slime mr doob link
When the page loads, everything—the logo, search bar, and buttons—immediately loses its structural integrity and crashes to the bottom of your screen . It’s a literal interpretation of gravity that is as chaotic as it is satisfying. : Created by Ricardo Cabello (Mr
No. This link gives you pure gravity physics, not a slime texture. However, the chaotic, floppy, bouncy behavior of the UI elements feels slime-like in motion. If you want actual slime visuals, you can combine this with a browser extension that adds gooey mouse trails—but the authentic Mr. Doob link is about physics, not viscosity. It’s a literal interpretation of gravity that is
Mr.doob is a visionary in the world of web-based graphics. Beyond Google Gravity, he is the primary author of Three.js, a popular JavaScript library used to create 3D graphics in a web browser. His portfolio at mrdoob.com contains dozens of experiments that manipulate reality, light, and physics.
Created by (real name: Ricardo Cabello, a well-known creative coder), Google Gravity is a JavaScript experiment that uses the Box2D physics engine. When you visit the special link, the Google logo, search bar, buttons, and even the "I’m Feeling Lucky" option suddenly obey real-world gravity — they come crashing down, stack up, or slide around as you drag them.