>>724583346
If you lived in that era of online-use it is very much a trip down memory lane (bleached of most of the racism/super dark humour.) It's a fun mystery and getting to experience the growth of the simulated online platform through the different archives you explore as a contract tech guy emulating a board moderator in the actual simulation. Your actions in the simulation can affect the emulated web pages further down the line such as cracking down on posting of specific digital likenesses or banning certain individuals for harassment and it can get a little emotional if you allow yourself to get invested in it. There's digital memorials to pets and people, earnest first-time users of the web service like tech illiterate mothers or overly patriotic ALL CAPS AMERICA FUCK YEAH MIDDLE-AGED FAT GUYS. You can discover mysteries within mysteries and unlock new tools and shit to further peel back layers of the emulated environment and find web pages not viewable to regular users of the service at the time hidden away by system admins at the time or hackers experimenting within the confines of the unique digital service.
I would say if you don't mind a lot of reading, yearn for the simpler times online and miss the earnest approach to web page design during the web 1.0 era moving into 2.0. If the puzzles are too challenging you can access tools on your desktop outside of the simulated environment to help you without spoiling too much or even find assistance within the virtual environment itself or you can just look up guides if you don't mind straight up spoiling yourself.