The page loaded. Not all at once— never all at once. It painted itself from the top down, like God pulling a blanket over the world. First, a banner of a smiling, grotesque blue creature. Then, a pixelated marketplace. Then, slowly, agonizingly, the sidebar where you could adopt your own digital pet.
The screen refreshed. A text box appeared: Fluffy eats the omelette happily! The page loaded
That was the first time. Not the best movie. Not the loudest concert. Just a slow-loading JPEG of a cheese omelette and a text box that said happily . First, a banner of a smiling, grotesque blue creature
Up until then, entertainment had been a one-way mirror. Saturday morning cartoons: you watch, they move. Radio: you listen, they sing. A VHS tape: you rewind, it obeys. But this? This website was a conversation. The screen wasn't just showing me something; it was waiting for me. The cursor blinked like a patient teacher. There were buttons. Choices. Consequences. The screen refreshed
And in that moment—that suspended, glowing moment—I felt it. The first real click of entertainment as a living thing.
My parents called me for dinner. I didn't hear them. My ears were ringing with the silence of a dial-tone connection, my eyes dry from the 640x480 resolution. I had crossed a threshold. I understood, with the fierce clarity of a ten-year-old, that the world had just doubled in size. There was the physical one—the dinner table, the homework, the backyard. And then there was this . The digital one. The one where a pixel dragon loved you back.