Bruno Simon – 3D Portfolio

(bruno-simon.com)

777 points | by razzmataks 94 days ago

60 comments

  • nbadg 94 days ago
    For those that can't get it to load (it takes a minute, and I noticed my desktop's fan kick it up a notch while things were getting initialized, so... YMMV): this is a portfolio site done via a cozy-gaming-style AWSD game where you drive around in a jeep-like thingamabob. There are some cute easter eggs, including a sort of... shrine to each of the socials, which you can run into with your car and knock over (though the links remain clickable, of course!). It also looks like there's some degree of global state; for example, you can "sacrifice yourself to the gods of chaos" (ie drive into a portal) and a counter on the side of the portal goes up, presumably for everyone (since I certainly didn't drive into it 1700 times myself!). There's a strongly consistent art style, and just generally... seems pretty polished. Or at least, that's what it felt like after 5 minutes of driving around.

    All in all I'd say, I'm impressed, and enjoyed it. Though I think the HN title ("handsdown one of the coolest 3D websites") is maybe a bit much. It's an extremely-well-executed portfolio site; no more, no less.

    • ragazzina 93 days ago
      > Though I think the HN title ("handsdown one of the coolest 3D websites") is maybe a bit much.

      How many cooler 3D websites do you know? I personally know less than 10, and only https://messenger.abeto.co/ off the top of my head.

      • antonvs 93 days ago
        If you count game demos on the web, then Epic Citadel, based on the port of Unreal Engine to various mobile and web platforms including HTML5/WebGL/asm.js, had a much detailed and more 3D world - it used all 3 dimensions fully, unlike OP which appears to be a flat world that’s quite restricted vertically. That demo first came out about 15 years ago, with the HTML5 version coming out a few years later.

        Since then I’ve seen several other sites along similar lines, since Unity released a similar capability, but I haven’t kept track of them. The problem is they’re all essentially games that are more impressive for their look than their functionality, so they tend to have a spike of interest when people first see them and then you never hear of them again. And typically, the tech bitrots and the sites stop working after a while.

      • chrismorgan 93 days ago
        Honestly I wouldn’t call that a website. It’s a 3D game that runs on the web.
      • ggsp 93 days ago
        Wow. Messenger is beautiful!
    • PaulHoule 94 days ago
      I navigated using touch on my iPhone and it felt a lot like playing Genshin Impact
      • yieldcrv 93 days ago
        Safari highlighted something and it highlighted the whole screen and I couldnt get it to unselect
        • jama211 93 days ago
          That’s a classic issue with these, and often not solvable by the web developer - an issue with mobile browsers themselves that’s hard to get around
          • animuchan 93 days ago
            It's trivially solvable with CSS though, isn't it? See the beginning of this stylesheet for example: https://github.com/mvasilkov/board2024/blob/master/out/app.c... — this is from my small 2024 game.
            • jama211 87 days ago
              Alas no, it doesn’t solve it for all browsers/use cases.
            • ffsm8 93 days ago
              You mean the select: none, along with the drag setting?

              If so, that's not necessarily followed/applied for accessibility reasons

              • animuchan 93 days ago
                If your game is essentially a single canvas element, having it user-selectable clearly doesn't help accessibility in any way.
                • ffsm8 93 days ago
                  You say that as if I've got any control over the browser on the end users device, some of which will be configured to not apply these rules globally for accessibility reasons...
      • antonvs 93 days ago
        Better collision detection and clipping than Genshin Impact though
    • bartread 93 days ago
      It is cool.

      I am irked that on desktop it does not work in Firefox, but only in Chrome (and presumably other Chromium based browsers).

      I'm not a big fan of Chrome, for a variety of reasons, but principally because I don't trust it and can no longer use a good ad blocker, so I never really enjoy having to fire it up.

      • pilaf 93 days ago
        Weird, I had no issues playing it on FF.
        • ProllyInfamous 93 days ago
          Plays fine on FF.112

          After watching developer's "making of" video, I went and grabbed my USB gamepad (from twenty years ago) — whenever the gamepad is plugged in, Bruno's gamesite stops responding (until controller is unplugged).

          I would recon if this isn't playing on your end, it has more to do with using uncommon hardware configurations (not necessarily lack of horsepower).

      • djsavvy 93 days ago
        I played it on Firefox on MacOS! Are you on an old version?
        • bartread 93 days ago
          Nope, bang up to date, disabled all extensions - just did all the obvious stuff that can hamper sites from operating.
    • teekert 94 days ago
      It worked surprisingly well on ddg browser, iOS, iPhone mini 12. So, impressive!
      • frizlab 94 days ago
        All browsers on iOS are (still, though sadly not for long…) the same browser. Only the skin changes.
        • Tom1380 94 days ago
          Why is that sad?
          • arcanemachiner 94 days ago
            Because Apple's walled garden is for your own good, Citizen.
            • frizlab 93 days ago
              When it avoids a chrome (and thus google) monopoly: yes. And don’t talk to me about Firefox engine. Its market share is negligible and the whole thing only even still exists because google allows it.
              • soperj 93 days ago
                I would agree with this except Apple had done a terrible job of keeping up with standards ala IE for the longest time.
            • Isamu 94 days ago
              So WebKit is the walled garden? I thought it was the App Store.
              • wlesieutre 94 days ago
                The App Store is the walled garden that doesn't allow anyone else to ship a browser engine, except in certain markets where they have been forced by law to create a "Web Browser Engine Entitlement" that non-WebKit browsers can use with super special permission from Apple.
                • wkat4242 92 days ago
                  And so many strings attached that they don't really do so in practice :(
          • rimunroe 93 days ago
            Because so many people use iPhones as their primary devices it's hard for businesses to accept making their websites only support browsers which are built off Chromium. It somewhat limits the power Google has to unilaterally dictate web standards.
        • teekert 93 days ago
          Luckily not for long you mean?

          I for one am looking forward to full-on Firefox with extensions etc.

          • frizlab 93 days ago
            You can already have Firefox extensions on iOS with Orion.
      • haritha-j 93 days ago
        not so well on chrome on ihpone xr sadly. But perhaps thats asking too much of a tired 7yr old device.
    • BugsJustFindMe 92 days ago
      Is it really "extremely well executed" if it takes so long to load that I've closed the tab before seeing anything because it looks broken?
      • satvikpendem 92 days ago
        Yes because games take time to load, they are asset heavy.
    • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF 94 days ago
      AWSD == WASD?
    • miohtama 93 days ago
      Also works on mobile
  • andrenotgiant 94 days ago
    This got me thinking: Rewind 25 years, I can easily imagine 15 year-old me sinking DOZENS of hours into playing this "game". I remember I put much more time than that into a free game that came in a box of cereal[0].

    Today, I loaded the site up and spend about 30 seconds on it before deciding "this is cool!" and moving on, probably never to return.

    What changed? I guess it's a mix of: (A) How I value my time. (B) The bar for "what pulls me in" in terms of gaming. (C) Some other factor around me just having already burned enough hours on games.

    I'm not really sure how much each factor contributes.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chex_Quest

    • zdc1 93 days ago
      Opportunity cost and perspective. We've probably played enough games to know how the cycle goes; there's a little voice in our heads now telling us that it's all just a big pixel hunt and the next few hours will be more of the same (my interest in a game fades once I learn the meta). And then there's so many games these days... so the other question is why not play something more interesting or exciting?
      • Cthulhu_ 93 days ago
        I think that's it, when it's new you explore, but when you know what to expect or seen it before, exploration is no longer interesting.

        That said, there's some games out there today that draw me in just as much as others did 25 years ago; I've spent hundreds of hours in Factorio, I can't imagine how much I'd be into it 25 years ago (...assuming I would have understood it back then). Likewise, I'm sure I'd be a lot more into Minecraft if I was 25 years younger.

    • CamperBob2 94 days ago
      This particular site reminds me of The Messenger ( https://messenger.abeto.co/ ) which was on HN not too long ago.

      If this is the sort of thing you like (or in your case, used to like), you will like The Messenger too, probably more.

    • Twisol 94 days ago
      > What changed?

      Personally, I feel too guilty about everything else I'm not doing. (This results in me feeling maximal guilt and doing minimal anything at all.)

      • tokioyoyo 93 days ago
        Same here. It's a very sad realization, and I'm envious of people who don't feel this way sometimes. Nice to have company in misery at least though.
      • irrationalbrain 93 days ago
        I used to believe this about myself as well, but later realized it was a rationalization. The reality is it's because leaving hacker news for extended periods (more than a minute or two) results in dopamine withdrawal. I feel a powerful urge to return to browsing links and my brain makes up a reason along the lines of "you're wasting time by staying on this site instead of going back to hacker news." It's a similar thing that drives me to "skip ahead to the good part" in youtube videos rather than watching the whole thing, evidenced by my doing it even on videos that are very short.
      • mosselman 93 days ago
        That doesn’t sound healthy man. Unless that other thing you should’ve been doing is giving CPR or something then stop feeling guilty.

        “Productivity” is not the end goal, you are allowed to play games in life. In fact, shouldn’t work be about enabling you to enjoy life?

        • Twisol 93 days ago
          Weirdly, playing games is typically something I the feel least guilty doing, precisely because it's a distraction from the other stuff I'd otherwise not be doing. There's just a lot of stuff I want to do, that I struggle to do, and so I feel guilty about not making progress on that stuff. Then, whenever I try to do something else, I feel too guilty to do that something else.

          It's a real self-reinforcing negative feedback loop. I agree that it's not healthy. It's just hard to break out of.

          • coldfoundry 93 days ago
            I deal with the exact same mental model. I think for me, while actively gaming I do have fun. It’s only after the fact I look back on the time wasted gaming and think “wow, I really should have worked on that project I want to build instead of playing a game”. It’s also hard to rationalize time spent gaming when you have nothing to show for it afterwards.

            If you ever figure out the solution to this negative thought-loop, let me know please!

      • haritha-j 93 days ago
        Ditto. its a bit sad. I miss not knowing about all the things i could be doing.
    • tobinfekkes 94 days ago
      I absolutely LOVED ChexQuest. It was fantastic. Just played it recently, in fact.

      I was roaming around RE-PC in Seattle eons ago, and found an old CD of the game for $1. Snatched that sucker right up.

      • nylonstrung 94 days ago
        ChexQuest is so much better than it has any right to be. Loved it as a kid
    • komali2 94 days ago
      Did you have access to as many games back then? Maybe the novelty is less for this game?

      If I wanted to play a game like this I'd play Lonely Mountain: Downhill, which has waaay more content.

    • 61j3t 94 days ago
      It's called growing up
      • jader201 93 days ago
        I dunno. I see many “grown ups” replacing video game time with just more time scrolling on their phones, or maybe on the TV watching YouTube or some streaming service.

        I think playing (some) video games can be a bit better for your brain vs. the above alternatives. At least many of them require thought and/or coordination.

        Again, there are exceptions, where they’re not much better than doom scrolling. But it’s not hard to find some that require some effort and thought.

        • rajamaka 93 days ago
          That's me, 2 kids and no time to game. Yet find 2 hours to doomscroll twitter every day.
          • amonith 93 days ago
            Same but with 1 kid and different websites (including HN, which is equally bad!). Actively fighting it though. Slowly removing all social media accounts, now just need to figure out how to block stuff permanently on my phone. On a desktop I did it with changing my hosts file to point everything to 127.0.0.1. Need to figure out how to do this also on mobile without an additional network device that would disrupt things for my wife.
          • BeFlatXIII 92 days ago
            Are those 2 hours of doomscrolling consecutive? That's the big difference in finding time to game.
    • qoez 94 days ago
      I think it's in large part just having to do with us developing our frontal cortex and like impulse control. I would have probably gotten dopamine addicted to it 15 years ago, as well as wouldn't have some nagging back-of-mind thoughts about having to use my time to be converted into money to survive at that age.
    • nurettin 94 days ago
      Your wonder and discovery phase is over.
      • mikepurvis 94 days ago
        I dunno; I'm 39 and just spent 50 hours in Arc Raiders, much of it in a state of wonder and discovery.

        I think there's definitely a raising-the-bar effect here too.

    • BeFlatXIII 93 days ago
      I miss the days when I'd click every link and follow every rabbit hole. 100% completionism of collection games. It's shaped how my life has turned out, for better and worse.
    • cr125rider 91 days ago
      I was going to show it to my kid. I bet she’d love it!
    • bobsmooth 94 days ago
      You got older.
  • allannienhuis 94 days ago
    Bruno’s Threejs course is great. I’m about 2/3 the way through it, taking my time. Well organized and extremely well documented. Highly recommend, if a recommendation from a threejs novice is worth much.
    • beezlewax 93 days ago
      I completed it years ago. Great course and ge seems like a super nice guy. I must check back in to see what's changed.

      His website had the same car based premise back then but with less frills.

  • catapart 94 days ago
    Very neat! I and completely respect the skill. I respect the effort even more!

    That said, it's not 'hands down, one of the coolest 3D websites', at least that I've seen. It's all "technical", very little "design". For example, why is it 'isometric overhead'? There's no particular benefit in the view, and it's specifically harder to control than it would be with a 'chase'/'third-person' camera. It's not like this is an RTS or a city-builder-ish thing, where having an overhead layout works to your benefit. Rather, it's just easier to program a camera that never changes angles and input controls that never have to re-interpret camera position/rotation (lookat vector) to function correctly. And there's a kind of symmetry between a flat page and the "ground" that the truck drives on, so some parts of the web forms have been ported over to that.

    Again, none of that is bad and especially none of it is wrong. It's very cool that it works and works so well (technical)! It's just that the design feels more "portfolio" than it does "best ux for interacting with the environment I've created and the paradigms I've invoked (vehicle control)".

    • Cpoll 94 days ago
      > For example, why is it 'isometric overhead'?

      That's design exactly. There's no technical obstacle to making it over-the-shoulder instead, but it changes the aesthetic. The animations focus on what the jeep does to things, so a racing view that helps you avoid running into things wouldn't be appropriate. It also changes how you see the assets. And you'd lose that 'RC Pro-Am' feel.

      > Rather, it's just easier to program a camera that never changes angles and input controls that never have to re-interpret camera position/rotation (lookat vector) to function correctly.

      Not really, you just put the camera on a spring arm attached to the vehicle. Vehicle movement isn't harder either. You get this stuff practically for free with any game engine.

      • catapart 94 days ago
        What do game engines have to do with this?

        You're welcome to your counter-opinion about the design, but you haven't convinced me. I've played plenty of games with third-person views where the gameplay was quite conducive to running in to things. I can also appreciate that the design is faux-retro, but that's kind of my whole issue with it. Sticking to a design because it is nostalgic is not user-focused. It's demographically limiting, by design. It's specifically niche-targeting. That's the opposite of trying to make the best kind of thing for the most kinds of people. Which is a business interest of a portfolio site. Building a little game for people who likes those types of games? Sweet! More power to you. But if you're showcasing a demo for wide audiences, a critique of the niche-targeting is valid. Not nearly as important as the people claiming they can't even play the game, for sure! But if you bounce one person because they press up on the keyboard and the truck moves "forward", and they don't like that - it's a marked negative for the site's intent.

        You can't worry about pleasing everyone, and you especially can't worry about broad, overall, two-paragraph critiques on literal months of dedicated work. But neither of those make the critiques, themselves, improper or even wrong.

        • Cpoll 94 days ago
          > What do game engines have to do with this?

          You seemed to imply that the developer chose isometric to make development easier. I'm rebutting that this is unlikely; they're equally easy with an engine (and if you're not using an engine, you're skilled enough that they're still equally easy).

          > But neither of those make the critiques, themselves, improper or even wrong.

          Are you referring to my critique of your critique of razzmatak's critique ("Handsdown one of the coolest 3D websites")? Surely if you're allowed to disagree with them, I am with you.

          • catapart 94 days ago
            ah, easy enough then: mistaken inference on your part.

            > Are you referring to[...]

            I'm referring to critique, in general, for the former, and my specific two paragraphs of critique on the project - not the commentary - for the latter. Your being "allowed" to disagree with me is what is meant by the sentence "You're welcome to your counter-opinion about the design, but you haven't convinced me."

    • robofanatic 94 days ago
      > That said, it's not 'hands down, one of the coolest 3D websites', at least that I've seen.

      Would love to see those websites.

      • catapart 94 days ago
        Right? I'd love for some of them to still be around. Unfortunately, portfolio sites are ones that I find are often lost to time.
        • esseph 94 days ago
          Reminds me of those insanely intricate flash demo websites
    • Cadwhisker 93 days ago
      I can't see Bruno's site and I assume it's because of the HN hug of death, but an impressive 3D website that always comes to mind is acko.net, with its 3D rendered tubular logo. He even describes how it was done in a blog post.

      https://acko.net/blog/zero-to-sixty-in-one-second/

      • sunrunner 93 days ago
        acko.net is one I thought of immediately too. The front page for Three.js usually has some nice examples too.

        Of course, with WebGL and WebGPU support becoming ever more ubiquitous I'm not sure when 'impressive 3D website' just becomes either 'impressive website' or 'impressive 3D'.

        [1] https://threejs.org/

      • Cadwhisker 93 days ago
        OK, I take it back now that the HN hug has died off a bit. Bruno's site is a ridiculously neat thing to see in a web browser.
    • didibus 94 days ago
      I agree with you, it's not that it isn't impressive, but it functions poorly as a website. Innovation in design I'd expect from the HN title is something where the 3D enhances the user experience of the website itself, navigation interfaces feel natural, and so on.

      This is a very well made little game that also showcases some of their work. I was hoping for something like, now I wish all websites were like this.

  • ChrisArchitect 94 days ago
    (2019) amazingly

    Some behind the scenes from the Bruno himself:

    https://medium.com/@bruno_simon/bruno-simon-portfolio-case-s...

  • mrinterweb 93 days ago
    I wish more of the web was like this. I miss the wild creativity of websites way back in the day. The web has mostly homogenized around what web UI should be. I love seeing weird experimental stuff made just for fun.
  • tgdn 94 days ago
    Does not work on Chrome, and actually freezes the tab
    • dmd 94 days ago
      Works fine in Chrome on both my W11 and MacOS 15.7.2 machines.
    • Shaanveer 94 days ago
      google on linux does not support webgpu. (its hidden behind some flags) https://github.com/gpuweb/gpuweb/wiki/Implementation-Status
      • ycombinatrix 94 days ago
        That linked page says webgpu is behind a flag in Firefox for Android but the website worked for me.
    • jofla_net 94 days ago
      FF on linux worked great.
    • Karawebnetwork 94 days ago
      On Edge, my tab did freeze for a few seconds then the spinner resumed its spinning and the 3D scene displayed.
    • stronglikedan 94 days ago
      Worked for me on Windows with Version 142.0.7444.177 (Official Build) (64-bit)
    • tempestn 93 days ago
      It was very laggy for me in Firefox on Windows, but played smoothly in Chrome.
    • werdnapk 94 days ago
      I had to load the site a second time in Firefox to get it working. So, try again?
    • Wistar 94 days ago
      Worked very well for me on iPad Pro and Safari. Only took a few secs to load.
    • RyanOD 94 days ago
      Just be patient. It took a while to load up in Chrome on my MBP.
      • frizlab 94 days ago
        People are discovering what it is to download an app (:
        • ssl-3 94 days ago
          Or they're discovering the limitations of Chrome.

          It showed up very quickly on my desktop rig. Linux, Firefox, with a CPU that's over a decade old, a GPU of about half that age, and the cheapest Internet that Spectrum will sell me.

          Just a second or three of a weird luminescent throbber, and then "Click here to start". No inexplicable lags at all -- it was all very smooth.

    • flanbiscuit 94 days ago
      Same for me. Worked smoothly in Firefox (MacOS Desktop)
    • samtp 94 days ago
      Worked fine on Chrome on Linux (Fedora)
    • esseph 94 days ago
      Works fine on Chrome using Fedora 43.
  • nikkwong 93 days ago
    This is amazing; now when is building this kind of thing going to become more accessible so we can start seeing a lot more of it? Webassembly has been around for years now but we still don't really see many companies compiling games or game-lite experiences to WASM. The tooling doesn't seem to be there which is the necessary prerequisite that could make building experiences like this actually feasible for most devs. Is that coming, ever?
    • beezlewax 93 days ago
      I don't even think you can make something like this accessible other than render a normal site for specific users. It's almost entirely visual.
  • FarhadG 93 days ago
    (shameless plug)

    I love all the work that Bruno puts out there. His design and engineering skills are next level.

    There are so many talented creatives using WebGL/WebGPU that I've recently launched WebGL.com / WebGPU.com, where I'm dedicated to bring together the community of creatives (designers, coders, AI/ML, etc.) pushing the boundaries of the web.

    Would love to see what you would like to see (e.g. tutorials, demos, etc.)

  • moribvndvs 94 days ago
    Very cool, even works on mobile. Although, just a nit, driving with your finger frequently activates the long press menu in iOS and spoils things.
  • kdmoyers 94 days ago
    Works fine on my android phone. Impressive.
    • GreeningRun 94 days ago
      Same. Fast loaded and very smooth
  • jauntywundrkind 94 days ago
    Building a good spatial website is so so high on my must do list.

    Alas, the state of WebComponents for 3d / spatial is so so. A-frame is still CJS only & won't work with my unbundled setup because of that, but that's sort of on me. Lume.io wraps three.js too and looks tempting, has a neat signals & cool behavioral classes. https://aframe.io/examples/ https://github.com/aframevr/aframe/issues/4242 https://lume.io/

  • tomhow 93 days ago
    Previously:

    Bruno Simon – 3D Curriculum - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21362200 - Oct 2019 (42 comments)

  • didibus 94 days ago
    It's cool, but I actually find it pretty bad as a website. The UX for navigating and all that, it's bad. I was hoping for some innovation in UX which justifies the use of 3D in the website.
    • 65 94 days ago
      The unique UX of the site, driving around in a 3D car, is what makes this site go viral on occasion. If it were "good" UX, e.g. a standard portfolio site, no one would care and this guy wouldn't be as well known as he is. Therefore the UX is good.
      • didibus 93 days ago
        Hum, I guess, as some kind of metric maximizing dark pattern.

        But my point is that, it's not bringing in a new paradigm of UX that you'd want to immitate.

        Though maybe it could if others started making "video games but it's just navigating through a website as you play".

        • hahn-kev 93 days ago
          I think it's not a website you make to get hired to make business websites like this to display information (unless maybe it's a gaming company), but if you want someone to make a game on the web then this is a perfect portfolio site.
          • didibus 93 days ago
            I agree, I was comparing it to the title of the hacker news post which initially said "Most impressive 3D website ever" or something like that. That enticed me to believe someone had figured out a really innovative way to make a website work in 3D.

            As a portfolio to demonstrate your three.js skills for web game making it's really good.

  • nomoreipg 94 days ago
    This is so insanely detailed I wonder how long it took him to build
  • gldrk 94 days ago
    This is very impressive as an art project, but terrible as an actual home page. It’s slow as molasses and difficult to navigate. Microsoft Bob failed for a reason.
    • onion2k 94 days ago
      Bruno Simon sells courses on how to make things with three.js. As a homepage it is an exceptionally good example of what you can do with 3D in a browser, and what buying his course will enable you to build. It's a great home page with that context. It would not work for many other people.
      • didibus 94 days ago
        It seems you need that context prior to visiting the website. Which, if you are looking to hire, and they send you to this site as a "show of skill" is totally great. But if you google searched for some info and stumbled on this, I'm not sure you'd even know what's on offer.
        • onion2k 94 days ago
          I think it's his personal site. The fact it's not littered with ads is kind of nice.
      • account42 93 days ago
        It doesn't show anything for way too long, not exactly a good example of three.js use on the web.
  • chenglemon 92 days ago
    Okay, bruno-simon.com is probably the coolest portfolio I've ever seen. You get to DRIVE A LITTLE TRUCK around a 3D world to see his projects! It's fun, intuitive, and technically impressive. The attention to detail is insane. Don't visit if you have a deadline—you'll get stuck there! #webdev #threejs #creativecoding
  • MarkusWandel 94 days ago
    I'm old enough to remember the SGI tractor-trailer demo wagon where they were demonstrating their latest, $20K+, wares that could do immersive 3D graphics that were... crude compared to this. This was sometime in the 1990s.

    And by now my kids play fluidly immersive 3D games, on the web, on the kind of computers you can get for $10 off Facebook Marketplace.

  • mrlinx 93 days ago
    I have a 4 yo, and I'm very reluctant to let him into the games world. But I've been thinking of buying a small Super Mario USB steering wheel and let him roam a very simple world like this. Anyone aware of something like this, maybe open source so that i can simplify to the simplest dynamics?
    • brentm 93 days ago
      My 4yo was a big fan of What The Car? on iPad. It's not quite as pleasant as this but there are some similarities.
  • mattdesl 93 days ago
    Amazing as always, Bruno is a wizard with ThreeJS.

    There’s a surprising amount of stutter and lag on iOS, evident after the loading bar completes and the app freezes for 30 sec. Also during gameplay, quite a bit of stuttering. My guess is GPU texture uploads or shader compilations. Otherwise it was buttery smooth.

  • iambateman 94 days ago
    This is unbelievable. So whimsical and fun and different...I really appreciated the attention to detail and joy that clearly went into it. Got to spend some time playing the racing game with my son and we can't figure out how people got 20 seconds...is there a speed boost?

    Anyway, super fun.

    • devin 94 days ago
      Shift is boost. The keyboard near the start will show you controls.
  • ertucetin 93 days ago
    It looks really nice, but CPU usage is almost 100% all the time. I have a MacBook Pro M3. When I open some fancy Three.js scenes that I found on the net, I instantly profile them. Most of them are really bad in terms of performance. I don't know why.
    • division_by_0 93 days ago
      This is usually because they are rendered in an animation loop (most three.js examples are set up like this). An example of rendering on demand only (this is even using fancy bloom post-processing): https://cybernetic.dev/helix/about
    • freehorse 93 days ago
      Also really high GPU usage and power draw in total. Averages around 60-70W most of the time.

      Really cool website, no doubt about it. But it consumes as many or more resources than games like cyberpunk or baldur's gate 3 on my macbook.

  • nkrisc 93 days ago
    Wow crashed Firefox on MacOS straight to desktop. Not even just the tab, the entire application.
    • j16sdiz 93 days ago
      work for me on firefox on mac
      • wkat4242 92 days ago
        For me on Firefox for android even
  • javawizard 93 days ago
    Woohoo, I got number 10,000 on the altar! https://youtu.be/4KYI8CgGrLw

    Now who was there with me running it up at the same time :)

  • sshadmand 94 days ago
    Takes a min to load even when it shows the circle complete. But a 1-2xrefreshes load it and yes, it is pretty sick. Wish you could zoom out more though. Nice work to Bruno!
  • wbobeirne 93 days ago
    I enjoyed poking around to look for how to get the debug menu and hacker achievement, that's a nice touch to encourage you to peek into the source.
    • meep888 86 days ago
      How do you get hacker?
  • brentm 93 days ago
    Pleasant and nicely done. Took me a few seconds to figure out how I was suppose to drive around but very pleasant experience.
  • sillyboi 93 days ago
    Looks great, but it lags a bit on my phone with a Snapdragon 855 and 12 GB of RAM. I really like the vehicle controls.
  • nokun7 94 days ago
    I used to play a game called Pro-Am on Nintendo. This game reminds me so much of that. The controls are basically the same.
    • esseph 94 days ago
      Pro-Am was amazing. Didn't like the sequel.

      The Unbeatable Car in the first game was kinda frustrating!

      • nokun7 92 days ago
        Yes! You bought back fond memories, despite the frustrations.
  • shmerl 94 days ago
    It just shows me a black screen (Firefox).
  • hexo 93 days ago
    I see just a black background. Are you sure this is a website and not just chrome-only experiment?
  • indigoabstract 93 days ago
    This is quite nice. I wonder why doesn't he make games instead of being a web developer?
  • sech8420 94 days ago
    Awesome concept, but loading took 30 seconds and too many studders/lag on my phone.

    11/10 creativity.

  • retube 94 days ago
    MY 24GB of RAM struggles with this
    • ProllyInfamous 94 days ago
      Some other bottleneck on your end.

      8GB M3 MacBookAir runs it smoothly, with only a few seconds of loading.

  • bdcravens 94 days ago
    Gotta admit, I knew the OnlyFans action button was a risky click, and I did it anyways ....
    • gerdesj 94 days ago
      I mashed the button and ended up in a right old mess 8)
    • ge96 94 days ago
      well is it worth the sheckles?
  • ing-norante 93 days ago
    I watched all the dev vlogs on YouTube. This is a true masterpiece. Kudos to Bruno
  • cantalopes 94 days ago
    Cool indeer but i want to see someone from hr driving to that work experience driveway
  • jzer0cool 93 days ago
    Nice! Ok, any list or core libraries used to help to create something like this?
    • wbobeirne 93 days ago
      Three.js for the bulk of it, and it looks like Rapier is being used for physics.
    • shnjd 93 days ago
      Three.js
  • ge96 94 days ago
    dang that froze my browser starting up on mbp 16" but yeah it's legit the truck you can drive around with arrow keys

    let's see ATS parse this

    the collision physics on individual items like chairs is pretty cool

    damn map has no boundary ha, weather system? damn

  • yesitcan 94 days ago
    Cruising around when suddenly I see a tooltip with the N word pop up
  • s1mon 94 days ago
    HN hug of death? I couldn't get it to load (beyond the grid/circle background) on Safari/Mac, but eventually it loaded in Chrome. Seems to just be a game - use AWSD keys. Not sure why this is "coolest 3D website" in this day and age.
  • Elizer0x0309 93 days ago
    Absolutely beautiful! Thank You for the polished experience.
  • FpUser 94 days ago
    Love the design and programming (tested on Brave browser)
  • yakkomajuri 93 days ago
    Impressive! Very cool that it works on mobile too
  • binary132 93 days ago
    Impressively playable on iPhone safari
  • runsonrum 94 days ago
    Reminds me of RC Pro Am :-)
  • nness 94 days ago
    Does not work on Firefox :(
    • amelius 94 days ago
      Works for me, on Linux.
      • scandox 94 days ago
        Works for me Firefox on Android mobile
    • neogodless 94 days ago
      Firefox, Windows 11.

      It loads, I can navigate (drag), and click the white diamonds.

      There are things like the RC truck and bowling ball that are not interactive and look like they should be, so I suspect it's a bug?

      EDIT: OK it's a learning curve. With mouse/keyboard, you can click the hamburger icon in the top right, and get to an explanation of controls. I am able to use WADS to drive the truck and push the bowling ball (with the truck.)

    • werdnapk 94 days ago
      I reloaded a second time and it worked in Firefox. First time, the circle loaded and then nothing. After it loaded, I saw no issues.
  • SilentM68 93 days ago
    Very Cool Indeed :)
  • talkingtab 94 days ago
    The course is great. I am a fan. This, not so much.

    One of the unsung problems of any technology is understanding what you can do with it that you could not do before. Lets say you are a prehistoric person and somehow you find a modern steel axe. What do you do with it? Ultimately, it is not the axe that is important, it is the metallurgy.

    Lets say you are a modern person and you found bitcoin. What do you do with it? Again, my thought is not the bitcoin, it is the cryptographic technology.

    Lets say you are a modern person and you find threejs. What do you do with it? My personal reaction is that there is so much more that can be done with threejs, react-three-fiber, react-three drei, shaders, shadertoys, than this.

    For me the definition of "cool" is things that change how you see the world. Where you never look at things the same way. A little example for me was this:

    https://codepen.io/prisoner849/full/wBGQYvy

    • sshadmand 94 days ago
      How he created a world around his CV may not be groundbreaking, but very creative and done exceptionally well. I caught myself driving around for a couple minutes. Accepting cookies bakes a cookie, you get hidden easter eggs when you complete certain actions (like lift driving in water). Just like with any creative endeavor (movies, music, dance) doing something no one has ever seen isn't always the goal (striving for that can often feel forced/cringe); creating an emotion in someone is art - and this did that for me.
  • noobcoder 92 days ago
    my macbook hung big time opening this
  • include 94 days ago
    works on Brave :) and actually fery cool :)
  • dwa3592 94 days ago
    Holy shit, this is really cool. i felt like i was in a movie. the car blows up and is ready to go right away; the car drives in the water (faster if you hold down the space bar). music is nice; and the 3d rendering is also pretty smooth. love it.
    • esseph 94 days ago
      shift is turbo mode

      B or CTL is brake

      H is horn

  • stefanka 94 days ago
    So beautiful!
  • FlamingMoe 94 days ago
    does not work on internet explorer
    • tiborsaas 94 days ago
      Try to upgrade to IE8, I've heard it's awesome.
    • esseph 94 days ago
      Game struggling in lynx
  • PaulHoule 94 days ago
    Wow!
  • tonetheman 94 days ago
    [dead]
  • gregoriol 94 days ago
    Works well on Safari 26.1, nice "game-dev" example, but not clear if it's a demo or a personal website: if former then nice, if latter then unusable
  • vegabook 94 days ago
    This is a cool website but it's hardly groundbreaking. There have been hundreds (thousands?) of three.js/babylon.js in-browser demos over the past decade and this would qualify as top 10% area, but there's nothing here that hasn't been done before. It's fun, it's high quality, but it's not new, and as far as conveying useful information, it's actually quite cumbersome with high effort for low signal. And while it's polished, it doesn't come close to even the most basic indie 3d game.