I’ve been building a little browser-based digital grimoire / webgrimoire for my site, and it’s finally at the point where I want to let other people try it.
https://shrine404.neocities.org/grimoire
It’s still in beta, so im basically just asking people to poke around, play with it, and tell me what works, what feels clunky, and what you’d want added.
It's not a productivity app so don't go in expecting that. I wanted it to feel personal, decorative, a little old-web, a little devotional lol..
I worked really hard on this so if you can give me feedback and maybe reblog I'd be so happy. Again it is FREEEEE.
What it can do right now:
☾ create entries for different sections like spells, materia / correspondences, dreams, lore, links, journals, divination / omens, and more
☾ has an altar / webshrine area where you can make little devotional pages with things like:
shrine images
candles
offerings
blinkies / extra shrine images
shrine frames / styles
relics / decorative bits
“now playing” style details
guestbook / shrine personality features
☾ has a practitioner / about area so you can personalize it with your own path, signs, beliefs, deities, tools, icon, etc.
☾ includes writing tools so entries can be more than just plain text — invocation blocks, prayer cards, omen / warning boxes, poetry formatting, ritual steps, foldaway notes, dividers, and other little text charms
☾ lets entries link to each other, so it can work more like a tiny personal web or wiki instead of just isolated notes
☾ has optional ritual metadata / seals for entries, but they can also be turned off if they don’t fit the page
☾ has backup / export options all grouped together, including a full HTML export option
☾ has different palette / theme options in settings, including lighter and darker modes for readability / vibe
☾ has a header image option and other little personalization settings
A few important notes before using it:
𖹭 it is still a beta
there may still be bugs, odd save issues, awkward layout moments, or parts that need smoothing out
𖹭 it currently saves in your browser storage
so if you use it a lot, please export backups regularly
𖹭 it’s meant to be a little expressive and decorative
so some features lean more “digital shrine / personal archive / weird old web object” than “minimal serious app”
If you try it, I’d especially love feedback on:
✴︎ anything confusing or unintuitive
✴︎ bugs / things not saving properly
✴︎ sections or features you wish existed
✴︎ readability / accessibility issues
✴︎ whether the altar / shrine side feels fun enough
✴︎ whether the writing tools feel useful or too much
✴︎ anything that feels especially charming, broken, annoying, inspiring, messy, or missing
Basically: if you use it and have thoughts, I want them.
This is my weird little beta grimoire child and I’m trying to make it genuinely beautiful and fun to use, not just functional.
Also, if you like strange personal websites / old web things / occult tools / shrine pages / browser toys, you may enjoy it just for that alone.
In the late 1990s up until the early 2010s, fan-made plaintext game guides, hosted on sites like GameFAQs, NeoSeeker, and personal GeoCities pages, formed a parallel canon to official strategy guides available from the stores. Stripped of images, formatting, and sometimes even punctuation, these walkthroughs were designed to load instantly on dial-up connections and to be printed on cheap home inkjets. Within those constraints, ASCII art emerged as a quiet flex, usually elaborate portraits of the main character or the game's logo in blocky monospaced letters. It was digital folk art, born from limitation and a desire to leave a signature.
These guides were usually hosted under handles, yet they were obsessively maintained, versioned, and corrected through email feedback. Some authors included full changelogs, legal disclaimers, and even manifestos about plagiarism, because copying and reposting a text file, especially the ASCII art contained within, without permission was the original sin of early game guide culture. ASCII diagrams weren’t decorative alone; they solved practical problems. Before in-game maps were common, a neatly aligned grid of characters would explain in-game geometry and/or the author's advice better than words could.
Today, streamers, YouTube playthroughs, and clips have replaced the slow intimacy of reading a guide line by line. When a player gets stuck, they watch someone else do it in real time rather than scanning a text file looking for the answer. As a result, the ASCII-embellished fan guide has become a dying art form, still archived, still searchable, but new guides are rarely being put together now. What’s been lost isn’t just the format, but a particular relationship to games: one where help arrived as dense text, hand-crafted diagrams, and the sense that somewhere, a stranger had spent dozens of unpaid hours turning their obsession into a document for anyone patient enough to read it.