Human perception playground

Short browser games with measurable sensory feedback

Sensorium is a collection of original browser games about timing, motion, memory, color, and sound. Each game is designed to be playable immediately, then replayed in short sets so the result reflects skill rather than a single lucky tap.

The site focuses on compact experiments: release a moving point into a target, hold a ten-second count without a visible timer, rebuild a color from memory, or identify a rhythm difference by ear. Results use small, concrete measurements such as degrees, milliseconds, cents, count error, and clear or miss outcomes.

Each page includes the playable instrument, the rule summary, the measured signals, scoring notes, and a practice cue. That structure keeps the experience useful for players while also making the page understandable to search and advertising review systems that cannot play a full round.

What is measured

The games focus on perception skills that can be felt quickly: internal timing, motion prediction, pitch memory, color recall, visual quantity sense, and rhythm comparison.

How results work

Scores are intentionally concrete. Sensorium favors readable units like degrees, milliseconds, cents, count error, and color distance instead of vague badges alone.

Why sets matter

Many games use five-attempt sets because a set captures consistency. A single good attempt is exciting, but repeated closeness is the stronger signal.