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Like Hamlet said: “Words, words, words.” We’re surrounded by them, we’re defined by them, but somehow we’re always searching for the right ones. Well, search no longer, hungry wordsmiths, because all the words you’ll ever need are… wait, they’re contained within an endless word search? God damn it.
Words.zip is a huge grid of random letters in which users are invited to search for words. Loading the site places you in the center of the grid, where all the real estate is already taken, but if you zoom out and scroll for a bit, you’ll quickly find yourself a patch of pristine black letters on which you can unleash your inner sesquipedalian.
When you find a word, you can highlight it and commit it to the site’s database, at which point the letters become colored and unavailable for further use. The colors denote how many times the word has been found already, with purple words being the rarest and green the most common. And if you manage to track down a word that no one else has identified yet, congratulations: you’re doing better than we did.
What a lovely site! What a great way to learn new words! What good clean fun for all the family! Surely the internet has embraced the whole thing with a spirit of maturity and restraint! Right?
Well, no. What the internet has actually done is draw a dick on it. Zoom out far enough, and you’ll see that enterprising users have been arranging colored letters to draw things, and the result is that parts of the grid have started to resemble the door of the bathroom in your local dive bar. In fairness, the inevitable cartoon dick and balls is joined by other, non-phallic adornments: someone has drawn a lovely picture of a cat, a Jeff VanderMeer fan has painstakingly scratched out “Where lies the strangling fruit”, and a lovestruck logophile has declared their love for someone named Aida. (Aida, if you’re reading this: they’re a keeper!)
The site is the creation of one Luke Schaef, a developer who describes himself as “[liking] making things that make people happy or make people think.” For better or worse, Words.zip certainly seems to qualify as both. It’s also notable for using the .zip domain, which—despite what one might assume—is not exclusively for phishing attacks based around fooling people who believe they’re downloading a .zip file (see: when Google opened registrations for the domain in 2023, multiple security researchers and companies condemned the idea, warning that people generally associate “.zip” with a file type, not a top level domain).
Its URL aside, Words.zip is both a noble idea and an unintended canvas for people with questionable intentions and loads of time on their hands. In other words, it’s basically the internet in microcosm!
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Source: Gizmodo