And as the screen flickers, hungry again, you are left with the only question that matters: Will you click one more time?

Initially, this terrain is barren, grey, and low-resolution. It looks like a dying CRT television.

Critics called it “a necessary cold shower for the NFT generation.” Unlike static JPEGs that consume massive energy via blockchain storage, Kane’s piece was hosted on a low-energy server with a proof-of-stake mint. The piece’s anxiety mirrored Gen Z’s climate dread perfectly. Artnet called it "The first piece of software that made me feel guilty for opening a browser tab."