No fluff, no clickbait — just hidden gems, underrated tools, indie games/ films & lot more. Discover the best corners of the internet, curated for you by Coi.
Remember when the internet felt like a giant treasure hunt instead of just… cycling through the same five apps? Yeah, me too. That’s why I started COI (Corners of Internet)—a place where I dig up weird, fun, and happy corners of the web so you don’t have to.
No algorithms. No doomscrolling. Just pure internet exploration.
If it’s cool, underrated, or a little unhinged, it goes on COI.
Maybe it's a generational thing (I'm a 50+), I don't know, but when I see a 'Buy me (something)' or a 'tip me' first thing first on the home page even before I can get any idea of what I will find on the website I'm not likely to explore further. I thought you might want to know about that, even I may be in the minority.
Just in case:
Nope, I'm not cheap. I just want to know who and why I'm supposed to be paying a coffee to (or a pizza) before I decide I want to do it, or not to do it.
I'm always very happy to see people trying to refocus attention toward a less corporate-owned Internet.
I hope it was clear it's nothing personal, just my first reaction on visiting your page. I'll explore it further ;)
I don't think it needs to be hidden or anything, but consider your "before the fold" content, it's what is most important on a web page and what will grab users in the 2-3 seconds you have to capture their attention before many will click off.
Currently on your site I have to scroll down quite a bit beyond the fold to get to the actual website on my phone, as the top section is taken up by very large text superfluous to the main content.
I know it sucks to have to build for that sort of user, but it's a large chunk of users, and the rest are just putting up with the inconvenience haha :-)
Earlier 40’s and I have the opposite opinion on this.
I think the button needs to be prominent so people remember where it is if they find the site useful and now want to contribute. Building things and hosting them isn’t free and I have no objection to paying for quality content.
Some feedback: the "hi I'm coi" thing at the top? I thought it was another LLM AI thing introducing itself. I closed the tab immediately, but then double checked when I read the rest of this post.
The social media links at the top, especially Twitter, are a negative for me. Fuck twitter and Facebook.
The big color buttons (that are not actually buttons) interspersed with text is a choice but it feels very bad-modern to me. If you're going for more retro pre-shit, maybe take inspiration from https://evenbettermotherfucking.website/ or friends.
Actually I do wanna get a designer for the project in the near future when i make some money with this site and turn it very retroish.. Rn i'm working with templates and preexisting codes. Yeah I know its not perfect but it will get there slowly I promise.
Regarding the Hi I'm Coi, yes now I get how it may sound LLMish. But the idea was to kinda introduce a character called Coi who is surfing the internet and fining cool shit uk.
Socials : i know it is kinda negative even I wanna be far away but need to get some traffic for the site. I don't know how to work around it. Maybe when there is more awareness about the site I will remove it.
Hold on to your design, don’t let some critics change it.
I design web gui stuff a lot, and I am hyper sensitive to most designers including me, being constricted to some conventions. So I really appreciate well designed non conventional stuff, like used to be more common years ago.
Your web stuff adds value which will go away if you conform too much
Same old story of a community-driven site resorting to ads for revenue. After feedback they started a subscription-based version called totalFark that didn't have ads. Then they introduced ads on totalFark as well, but didn't vet their advertisers. So some of the banner ads were running malicious code on users browsers.
The internet used to feel like a treasure hunt because it wasn't indexed well, and a large part of the surface content were pages made by oddball people letting their weirdness run wild without social limitations.
Sure, algorithms keep most normies in a social media ecosystem, but it's also not exactly easy for me to make a truly anonymous website about the awesome predictions I've made from looking at the patterns in my breakfast cereal every morning - AND just let it be. There's pressure to promote it, crosspost it, etc. Even the fun of thought experiments posted to a GeoCities page come with risks now.
Maybe I'm jaded and lack the youthful energy to stay up until 4:30am slapping im14amdthisisdeep stuff somewhere. Maybe everyone else that's just slightly weird still expects to get paid for that with ads when it all used to be free and fun.
I've made websites about my little hobby projects. Rent a VPS for $1/month, get a privacy, no-name domain for $5/year, and just put stuff up. Mostly for my own reference or documentation; I don't care if anyone else ever sees it, but it does get hits (mostly from the openai bot). Shouting into the void like it's 1995.
I do miss when people would post links to actual interesting original sites, as opposed to just screenshots of other social media posts. Give me a link to https://tvtropes.org not a jpeg of the KnowNothingKnowItAll next to a picture of Elon Musk. That's resulted in the internet going from 99% crap to 99.99% crap.
I used to run a page for Robert E Howard, Conan author, way back in the day. I got to know others that shared an interest....we were our own small community. It was fun. I would link to stuff that was related, including music that I liked when reading. I would have these bands email me back about how they appreciated the link. It was great.
Then Google and Facebook started the end to all that
I think part of this is also the disbursement of things and difficulty of discovery.
Before social media, GeoCities and maybe Turcows was it for free webhosting, so they were water holes you could look through. With so many platforms now, creative people are so spread out that Neocities feels like Fisher Price My First Website, but then going to Medium or Substack is also limiting and just not a place I expect to find genuine fun crazy.
would fedi links first help?
if a site has precense in the gated communities but made that visually secondary to their friendica+masto+pixelfed links..?
(i don't want to go to a corprate kettlebox to check for news and updates, that's for sure.)
I dunno man. Accidentally seeing Goatse or Tubgirl never damaged me. Doomscrolling and social media in general though is making (not just) me depressed AF.
bread on earth : they are updating their site.. It is a good site, where you could find everything about bread. They also had recipes of antient bread. I think they'll be back soon.
Maybe I will move it to draft on out site.. Well the only way to report rn maybe an email. This is a one off occurrence, maybe I will think of something if more sites are going offline often.
This is pretty good and cool. Already found some hidden gems I didn't know about. Possible suggestion for another category is for youtube channels. Youtube's algorithm sucks now and there are only about 4 youtube channels I regularly watch. So it'll be cool to have a category to suggest good content creators on youtube .
I have subbed to all of them but video recommantions on youtube aren't even related to the video or even topic nowadays I find. I get mrbeast wannabees in the related tab despite never watching them. I can't find new channels because algorithm even with no influence recommends stuff I'm not interested in unlike when youtube was first around and it recommended you content creators based on your personal watches and not the algorithm
Maybe content creators in general? I'm just spitballing but ultimately it's up to you.
For suggestions on content creators.
Grant Wisler. Very underrated comedy skit maker. Reminds me of the early days of smosh and those kind of youtube videos but blends the skits with modern storytelling so it can go from a skit into a existenital piece of art and it doesn't feel jarring at all. I feel like he's going to make it big if more people knew about him.
Misohungrie. Cooking channel but cooks from those cookbooks based on fictional IP (One Piece, Ninja turtles, Gremlins even) to see if the food in the cookbooks is actually any good or if it's just a cashgrab. It's a very specific niche but a niche no one else is doing to my knowledge and he does it well.
Another cooking channel, sortedfood. Just a group of british mates having fun cooking food and learning about food. Sometimes they gameify things by having challenges but you always learn something new when watching it.
It's not just the Internet, though. There are no more gatekeepers or water coolers and everything is fed on demand. Have you noticed that TV and movie events have slowed down to a trickle? Ever found a cool show on a streaming service and found that nobody is talking about it unless you go search for some community of five people who are super into it? Nobody is playing any games and talking about them unless they're finding them through some influencer or they're just the same four big games that have dominated the market for the better part of a decade.
That's not going to revert back with something like this, I'm afraid. We've just lost the structures that got people to share in those collective moments and I'm not sure there's a way of bringing them back. On this side of the apocalypse, anyway, so maybe that'll fix itself.
True that is why i added a section for movies (moving images) I wanna fill that up with underrated indie movie and also a section for games with unique approach to it. All that is possible to do to develop the indie creators.
Fwiw, I can't really actually tell what to do on the page, at least on mobile there is a lot going on, including asking for money before I even understand what the page is for.
The initial landing page looks extremely messy and chaotic. It looks like it's made by an edgy tech intern who's goal it was to make it as modernly bad as possible. There's as many fonts as there are words and equally as many random images and CSS tricks that make it extremely hard to understand what the website is trying to do.
I'm sorry for the hard comment, but that's what I see.
I suggest 2 main things:
Keep it simple. It's a skill to keep something both interesting and simple and it's very important when designing landing pages.
Split your personal stuff and the service you're providing. You're mixing 2 different types of website and it does not feel professional.
I could give a much more in depth review if you want.