pmarreck 3 days ago

From the same creator (so funny):

https://pippinbarr.com/itisasifyouweremakinglove/

  • mlmonge 2 days ago

    Well this is odd... my mouse ran out of charge a minute into this "exercise." That's never happened before

    • m463 a day ago

      you need a gamer mouse with gold chain^H^H^H^H... RGB.

  • halkony 3 days ago

    This is excellent I loved this so much. I cant stop laughing.

  • derangedHorse 2 days ago

    That was hilarious. I wasn't expecting to play it all the way through at first.

    • tjbiddle 2 days ago

      I wasn't going to play all the way through - but felt like I'd be a tease if I just stopped

  • testplzignore 2 days ago

    I feel like I played this wrong, but it eventually let me win anyways.

logikblok 3 days ago

Related by the same creator https://pippinbarr.com/itisasifyouweredoingwork/

More accessible on desktop.

  • ricardobeat 2 days ago

    This is perfect. Especially the fact that 1) it never ends, and 2) you eventually figure out that the best way to get a promotion is not to be faster of more efficient but the exact opposite - delay ending the current task, and keep making it larger, until the next one comes along. Beautiful.

    • irjustin 2 days ago

      haha hilarious, it does end though when you become "CTO". You can read the code and it takes a LONG time to get there by "typing emails" or you can run `givePromotion()` or update the variables holding that.

    • wkat4242 2 days ago

      This sounds like something that needs to be automated with AI ;)

    • tomjen3 2 days ago

      You can progress by just putting something heavy on the spacebar.

  • yard2010 3 days ago

    The sounds made me feel like I live 1998 again. Surreal.

  • multjoy 3 days ago

    Thanks, I hate this

getnormality 3 days ago

Wow, I hated this experience within seconds. So I think it achieved its artistic aims.

  • because_789 3 days ago

    Heh, I loved it within seconds. So relaxing while also so darkly funny. Everyone is a bit different I guess. I sent it to some of my art-biz friends.

    • kobalsky 2 days ago

      > So relaxing while also so darkly funny

      it has that early internet screamer vibes, I was a bundle of nerves all the time.

magic_hamster 2 days ago

I guess this really shows my age because I can't find any reason for this to exist. Do people really feel "pressured" to be on their phone? What kind of terrible dystopia do these people live in? Why do you give a flying f** about what people on the bus that you'll never see again think that you should be doing? I feel so much pitty for anyone feeling this. It's not a healthy mindset.

  • wasabi991011 2 days ago

    I'm pretty sure it is a sort of art game / digital experience. Compare with "it is as if you were making love"[1] by the same creator, which gives a sex-inspired series of input tasks with an extremely barebones interface yet claims to be a "usable and efficient experience of pleasuring a partner".

    [1] https://pippinbarr.com/itisasifyouweremakinglove/

  • zyklu5 2 days ago

    You know how in every zombie movie there's a bit where our intrepid protagonists must blend in to avoid capture. I think this is that sort of thing.

  • pmontra 2 days ago

    An anecdote about that pressure and how we assume that people are messaging or browsing all the time.

    I was playing a game of Power Grid [1] about one year ago and I noticed that everybody were tapping on their phones all the time between their turns. After half an hour I finally said, "Oh well, I'll also start sending messages or you guys will think that I have no social life." They raised their eyes and looked at me startled. "But I'm using the calculator!" "Me too." "Me too."

    [1] https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/2651/power-grid

  • awongh 2 days ago

    I've actually been socially pressured to check my phone at a dinner table if at a certain point everyone else at the table checks theirs (which is not even a jab at them- at least a few people probably had a legitimately urgent-enough notification to attend to... making after-dinner plans, checking train schedule etc.) It's just funny how strong the social urge is to not just sit there if everyone else is also checking their phones.

    • DCH3416 2 days ago

      It's kinda like the early 2000s where someone on their cellphone (and later bluetooth pieces) had the appearance of must be important because they're on the phone.

  • DCH3416 2 days ago

    Well yeah. Otherwise what are you suppose to just sit there awkwardly in public?

    • mostlysimilar 2 days ago

      I would encourage you to take a breath and observe the world around you every once in a while.

    • drumttocs8 2 days ago

      Public buses existed before cellphones

      • TeMPOraL 2 days ago

        So did newspapers, which served the same social purpose on the buses before cellphones.

flanbiscuit 3 days ago

Love this. Thank you. I'm eating lunch at the moment, by myself, in a local casual establishment, so of course I pulled out my phone and the first thing I looked at was HN and this was the top post. I started playing and couldn't help smiling. Felt like I was watching a robot mimicking me as it was studying human behavior.

It also got me thinking about what I would do before smart phones. During the dumb phone era I was still pulling out my phone to text a lot so wasn't too different, but I also read books a lot more back then

  • jagged-chisel 2 days ago

    Knowing I would be out alone for a meal, I would have carried reading material- book, magazine, paper articles. Maybe a notebook to scribble notes.

    Now, I have an internet of reading material via my phone. Or my tablet.

    My family and I are close. We talk lots and often and tend to have enough context when a sentence or two needs speaking. We go out together, we chat a bit at the start of a meal, and we don’t need to speak much afterwards. We don’t get awkward, we can be quiet. But my brain continues - write a note, surface-level research on an idea … so we each look at a device for a few minutes. My daughter is keeping in touch with her significant other, my wife is likely gaming or maybe window shopping. If anyone speaks up, we pull away from the devices to talk.

    I’m personally not addicted to the device itself. But I’m like Johnny 5 - my intellectual curiosity is difficult to satiate. The readily available access to “input” is what keeps me plugged in.

    Back on topic: these art projects, or statements, or whatever that are designed to bring attention to our attention to our phones … interesting, fun, perhaps important. But I’m not a fan of the social nostalgia that sometimes appears in the comments. I never did just interact with strangers. Never had a meaningful conversation with a random person. I would have had my face in a book.

    In 2025, my phone is my book.

  • nicbou 2 days ago

    I went on a trip without a smartphone, as an experiment. You get used to the lack of entertainment. On the second day I got a book and a notebook. I talked to people more, paid more attention to my surroundings. It was a fun time.

  • thierrydamiba 3 days ago

    Agreed. This is amazing. Really awesome aha moment when you realize what’s going on.

    I’m going to start reading physical books again.

    Thank you.

  • jajko 2 days ago

    There was even an era before dumb phones :) Some people burried their heads in newspaper or books, some looked and watched the world go by. I still do it, phone is really last resort since I strongly believe its slowly making me more addicted to it (more like my brain is doing it on its own).

    Which is pathetic IMHO, I don't want to be tied to gizmo who is spying on me to sell me more tailored adverts, I want to have it as a servant and nothing more and certainly not reverse.

    There is an art in enjoying a situation while doing absolutely nothing, just looking around at the world and people. One shouldn't be uncomfortable when left with oneself alone for a while. This does a lot with stress management and cleaning up cluttered mind.

Willingham 3 days ago

I love that it tells me when to scratch my ear. I am always confused about when I should be doing that. 11/10

  • mattgreenrocks 3 days ago

    Is that the phone analog of your nose suddenly feeling itchy when playing music?

svennidal 2 days ago

Thanks! I needed this. My youngest son pointed out to me the other day while waiting in a doctors reception that I was the only adult not on my phone. When I looked around me, everyone was on their phone except for the occasional uncomfortable look they gave me every now and again. Now I can be on my phone without exhausting myself.

dnzm 3 days ago

"Swipe right" doesn't do anything for me (Fennec on Android).

  • furyofantares 3 days ago

    You press Play Online to play. Swipe Right is just a (confusing) image on the page.

    • ddq 3 days ago

      Swiping right on that image should definitely start the game.

      • olddustytrail 3 days ago

        Actually, having a simple and straightforward instruction that you need to ignore and do something totally different instead... kind of sums up the modern computer UI.

      • stavros 3 days ago

        For me, it just drags the image elsewhere.

        • furyofantares 3 days ago

          Yes, by "should" they mean "the site author should have made it work that way."

    • jeffhuys 2 days ago

      Goes to show; you can check every box and try so hard, but still fail and lose lots of people on screen 1.

      • wruza 2 days ago

        The trick is to not have screen 1.

      • cafeinux 2 days ago

        In the end, it doesn't even matter.

  • AznHisoka 2 days ago

    I tried swiping right 10 times like an idiot, thinking I didn’t swipe fast enough or something

    • fluidcruft 2 days ago

      I tried swiping a bunch, figured it must not work in Firefox for Android, tried in Chrome only to find out it didn't swipe there, either.

  • throawayonthe 3 days ago

    that's a screenshot, you have to click on the link to play

knowknow 3 days ago

The worst part about this is that I immediately thought that it would be useful in awkward transitory moments. Everybody pulls out their phone on the bus, so you could fit in pretty well with this instead of staring outside.

  • teamspirit 3 days ago

    What’s wrong with looking outside? I’m at the point where I treat my phone like it’s radioactive, actively trying to limit each encounter with it. I think we should all be staring out the window more often.

    • knowknow 3 days ago

      The way the buses are laid out in my city is that the seats are directly facing each other. So staring outside could make it seem like your staring at people if it’s too crowded. So it’s more comfortable to pretend to use your phone.

      • wkat4242 2 days ago

        People have a pretty good sense of whether you're staring at them or something just beside or behind them. Not really from the angle of your eyes but the way you react (or not) when the other person looks back.

        I wouldn't worry about that so much. And I worry about a lot of social things :)

  • alwa 3 days ago

    That’s kind of the weird trap, isn’t it? That it feels like there’s normative social pressure to do your phone too, right at the moment that everyone who would notice you doing or not doing so has turned their attention elsewhere?

  • inopinatus 2 days ago

    One of my hobbies when visiting London is smiling whilst taking the Tube somewhere. Oftentimes I am the only person in the carriage not wearing a glum or flat expression.

    • hkpack 2 days ago

      Ha ha, I remember I was beaten in USSR when I was a teenager and smiled on a bus without a reason for some time (was daydreaming about some random things).

      Was approched with “why are you fucking laughing?”

  • wruza 2 days ago

    You can simply scroll and tap a black locked screen. No one’s going to ask anyway.

  • jiveturkey 3 days ago

    What's so awkward about that?

    Do you also tip just because there's a line behind you and the self-service cashier tells you the machine "is going to ask you a question"?

    • throwway120385 2 days ago

      I feel like I should program an easter egg into one of those that occasionally asks people the question "do you like me?" and then has two boxes to tick that say Yes or No.

arjonagelhout 3 days ago

I like this concept! Although it doesn’t accurately reflect how I normally use my phone.

Maybe monitoring someone using e.g. some social media app and recording all taps and swipes might make it more realistic :)

Maybe also some directions like “now smile” or “now look awkwardly at someone in your environment like you’re hiding something”.

  • seabass-labrax 2 days ago

    Did the creator of the site just update it? Because it definitely has instructions like that now: it told me to narrow my eyes and grimace!

    • arjonagelhout 2 days ago

      Ah it might be that I didn’t try long enough!

      It does appear the instructions are randomized, so I might have been unlucky.

dunham 2 days ago

It reminds me of the book "Press Here" by Herve Tullet

https://www.amazon.com/Press-Here-Board-Herve-Tullet/dp/1452...

  • floren a day ago

    Somebody gave us that when our child was born. I donated it somewhere pretty quickly, not interested in reading a smartphone training guide to a 6 month old.

    • sfilmeyer a day ago

      How is the book a smartphone training guide? I've read it a few times with my toddler and enjoyed it, and felt like it was a very different experience from screentime (which they don't really get). I don't think it would have been enjoyable at 6 months old, since it's more about the kid doing things (encouraging them to help shake the book, et cetera) than just reading straight through.

      • floren a day ago

        As I read through it, it all felt like it was designed to give the kids the feeling that they were doing the same things mom & dad do on their phones.

bmcahren 3 days ago

This is actually perfect for AI robots to blend in waiting in public. Just like bartenders polishing glasses, you can't have them just staring making people uncomfortable.

  • autoexec 2 days ago

    You can bet that it won't matter if the robot is looking at you, it'll be capturing audio/video and collecting huge amounts of sensor data about its surroundings at all times. A robot looking at a phone would be redundant. Maybe the publishing lobby could push to get them to read physical books instead.

thinkingemote 3 days ago

It is good to be able to catch yourself or see yourself from another perspective. I liked it.

I wonder about the dopamine effect, could it be made even more boring?

furyofantares 3 days ago

You tricked me into meditating. Thanks, I love it.

  • amarant 3 days ago

    I also found this weirdly meditative!

    Almost made me worry: how much of a phone addict am I when I find this meditative?

    • larodi 3 days ago

      Being non-present on a screen reminds of meditation but is more akin to dissociation and is really dreaming awake. It takes you away but you dream a weird dream which is not yours .

      • furyofantares 2 days ago

        Well, I used the opportunity to be present. I was being a bit facetious about being tricked into it; it's a state I like to enter instead of being on a screen to begin with.

DecentShoes 2 days ago

Make this 10x faster, add music, and you have Elite Beat Agents, genuinely one of the best games on the DS.

  • Lucasoato 2 days ago

    Elite Beat Agents changed my life and how I perceive music. What an amazing game. If you didn’t cry when doing the You’re the Inspiration level, you have no soul.

    • DecentShoes 2 days ago

      Yeah. I was so sad they nobody ever made a bigger better version for the WiiU.

      Wish I could emulate it on my phone with S-Pen too but audio latency killed it last time I checked.

      I have been meaning to get a drawing tablet and try Osu, and I will, but the songs in it are unknown Japanese anime stuff and don't appeal to me so it's not quite the same.

      • skyyler 2 days ago

        There are countless songs in Osu!, but you may need to seek the ones that don't appeal exclusively to weeaboos.

        Heck, I think most of the tracks from Elite Beat Agents have Osu maps now.

praptak 3 days ago

We need this on a device which is not a phone. It could be a simple mechanical device which presents the instructions on a slowly scrolling paper tape.

simojo 3 days ago

It's incredible how pointless it seems when there's no wall of content in front of us. Great commentary.

  • gblargg 2 days ago

    I enjoyed it. I wish it had gave performance metrics so I could track improvement in speed.

nakedneuron 2 days ago

Author could add 'close your eyes' at some point.

Instant meditation app.

deweywsu 2 days ago

I think it's sad that we've created a society that feels social pressure to stare at a screen when they find themselves somewhere without something to say to someone else. This explains why social skills are on the decline.

  • wkat4242 2 days ago

    It's always been there. Before the phone we had the walkman. Before that the newspaper. There's always something to indicate 'do not disturb'.

    When I'm having a busy day I don't always feel like talking to randoms. I live in a city, not a village and I'll never know everyone.

  • Sir_Twist 2 days ago

    Is it a social pressure to stare at a screen or to just pretend to be occupied with something else? Would reading a few pages of a book, for instance, satisfy this social pressure? I do agree more generally that smartphones are borderline essential for many social expectations, though. I personally find smartphones really distracting, being a device that allows for instant information at merely the hint of boredom, and if they were less socially enforced I probably wouldn’t have one.

    • Ylpertnodi 2 days ago

      I'm reading hn - your comment - at the doctors. I'm early, she's gonna be, of course, slightly delayed = free hn time, for me.

johnea 2 days ago

Why are so many people suffering mental illness?

It's not funny, it's stupid, and sad.

If you find that "you're feeling intense pressure to be on your phone", throw it in the ocean!

  • deadbabe 2 days ago

    The problem is you can’t just tell people throw their phone away. You have to tell them what to do instead.

    Otherwise? They’ll just open their phone again and scroll Reddit or Hackernews.

    • eimrine 2 days ago

      People with mental ilnesses on HN? Too low probability IMO.

raldi 3 days ago

I'm getting a novel optical illusion with the spinning line in the box that shows up near the beginning: Whichever end I'm looking at looks normal, but the other end looks like a split hair, or an open pair of chopsticks. Like what's spinning isn't actually a "/" but actually a very narrow "V" .. only, if I try to look at the split part of the V, that part closes up and the opposite end splits.

Is anyone else getting that?

hn666 2 days ago

I'm gonna use this for when I gotta pretend I'm on my phone in public.

atlintots 3 days ago

This is perfect for when I'm awkwardly walking past the huzz and need to seem like I'm busy on my phone.

  • aio2 2 days ago

    never fail to impress the huzz

TZubiri 2 days ago

Love it, very creative counterattack on the attention wars.

I remember decades ago, first phones came out, and I was at a party and I had not much to do, so I took out my phone and pretended to send messages with someone. It felt weird, but now it would be such a "natural" thing to do when bored.

scottmcdot 2 days ago

Whenever I'm waiting for the bus or waiting for anything, I love to people watch (while not making anyone uncomfortable). People are so interesting!

  • nakedneuron 2 days ago

    Whenever I spot people watchers , I secretly observe them (not to make them suspicious or feel uncomfortable). They are the most interesting species!

inopinatus 2 days ago

This was not a realistic simulation of my usage. My primary glassface activity is reading books. So it should be a continuous slow scroll with infrequent access of a burger menu. Fortunately I can simulate this by reading a book.

dbtc 3 days ago

"Jiggle one leg". This is hilarious and very well done.

akpa1 2 days ago

Ohhhh, this felt so familiar. Listening to music while mindlessly scrolling and waiting for... something. Yikes. I really don't think I like technology any more.

nsxwolf 2 days ago

Is this supposed to be interactive? I see it says “Swipe Right” but nothing happens on iPhone.

keybored 2 days ago

How irreverent and at the same time non-committal. Just right. Instant hit.

Become an instant hit in your Internet subculture with this one weird trick.

dailykoder 2 days ago

Ok good, but I don't browse the web on my fone. Thank you for posting this

rullelito 2 days ago

This doesn't work on my phone. What is it?

bongodongobob 2 days ago

I want to get caught using this next time I'm at lunch.

anotheryou 2 days ago

oh you have to click the title and the swipe thing is an image...

that took me.. long

personjerry 2 days ago

> Follow the prompts and be free.

Which is it?

boxedemp 3 days ago

Found that painful, only got a 3 in

Interesting

boomskats 2 days ago

Irrationally disappointed that I can't install this as a PWA.

  • wkat4242 2 days ago

    It won't need much. Just a manifest really.

frostyel 2 days ago

A great addition to this would be if everything was synched from a central server. 20 commuters pressing their toes down and letting out a sigh at the same time. It would be like a multiplayer protest against attention-grabbing phones. Everybody playing the game would know if someone else was playing the game, but no one else. It may defeat the original purpose of the game to blend in, but I think it could be pretty fun to observe something like that.

  • seabass-labrax 2 days ago

    No idea why this was downvoted; I love your idea. After all, what are social activities but doing things, and sometimes pointless things, together?

kindeyoowee 3 days ago

do people not get tired of the ooo phones bad trope?

  • praptak 2 days ago

    Most of culture is (hopefully) new takes on topics which are much older than smartphones. "The topic is old" is not a sufficient condition to consider something tired/cliche/old.

    I'd say this one is different enough to be considered at least mildly interesting, even if you take into account that the genre "purposefully absurd pastiche of attention-stealing tech" is not new.

  • 256_ 2 days ago

    Welcome to Hacker News.

themusicgod1 2 days ago

yet another github project. STOP USING GITHUB

  • nerdile 2 days ago

    why?

    • eimrine 2 days ago

      It is owned by the Evil corp?