🧠 Memory in your browser
The browser is the most underrated game console ever shipped: it's already on every device you own, it updates itself, and it starts games in seconds. Memory was built for it — not ported to it — which is why a working memory duel feels identical on a gaming PC and a mid-range phone.
One game, every device
Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge; Android, iPhone, Windows, Mac, Linux, Chromebook — same rounds, same scoring, same leaderboards. Start a duel on your laptop, answer a rematch from your phone in a queue. Nothing syncs because nothing needs to: the game lives at one URL and meets you wherever you open it.
Why browser-native suits Memory
A game about working memory needs instant availability more than it needs a 4K install. The browser delivers exactly that trade: page-load in seconds, input latency low enough to measure milliseconds honestly, and a share model — plain links — that turns any chat thread into an arena. The heaviest thing about the whole site is your opponent's ego.
How to play Memory
- A sequence of blocks lights up, one by one. Watch — it plays once.
- Repeat the sequence by tapping the blocks in the same order.
- Accuracy first: a wrong tap ends your attempt.
- Correct and faster than your opponent wins the round.