One of the new media experiences of the Internet is the Wiki game – an asymmetrical “sim”, in which you rushed from this Wikipedia site to another by clicking the least number of links. Try doing that in the museum of everything, “an almost infinite virtual museum created from Wikipedia”, which you can download for free from itching. Invented by Maya Claire using the Godot engine with sound from Neomoon’s Wolf Willow, it is an unusual way to browse a great public resource or a deadly dog -free dog, depending on your mood.
The museum pulls down and creates a new exhibition space from individual Wikipedia pages when you explore. Its scale is only limited by the number of cache memory you assign it in the settings. No need to say, you will need to online to work. There is no effort to disguise Procgen: Instead, simulate creating a reliable charming scene of its own assembly. Marble screen, neat captions and high -class light accessories sliding and confused into the vision when you enter the room (again, you can determine the closeness that they appear in the settings). Instead of super links, there are very few signs with an arrow that only gives you a tunnel to a relevant exhibition.
If the museum of everything is a celebration of Wikipedia, with the option to jump out of the pause menu to visit the relevant page in the browser, the charm of its generation is quickly prioritized than the information to get information. The air Serenade you regularly venture down to other stairs, pursuing a layout that is not suitable for the Euclide, with all schools of thought and wisdom of the past periods, like Tardis inside a few meters wide.
This space is far beyond understanding, but, very small, for the architecture of each room is the same property collection, elegant arrangement. The wooden floors are polished to reflect the exhibitions but you cannot see yourself in it. A distorted melody penetrates into the sound of the air – is it a Tannoy’s notice? Someone sings? Oh damn, I have to go out. I fell into the corridor to “butter tea”, quickly entered the “list of butter dishes”, then “Dish (food)”, then “eat”, then “chew”, then “teeth”. I paused before a diagram of a mouse and I knew that the mouse was me. The museum has me now. Please come to me.