Net Art
HTML, CSS, JavaScript You arrive at a page with a simple choice: dog or cat. It feels like a personality quiz, a meme, a harmless way to declare a preference. You pick your side and click through. If you choose the dog, you meet Lucky. Born on Wish Street, one of seven siblings, Lucky narrates his life in short, plain sentences — until the last line lands: have you seen my mom? She didn't leave. She was taken to fight. If you choose the cat, you meet a kitten who lost their closest friend. That friend wasn't lost. They were taken as bait. The piece is built around a truth most people don't know: dog fighting destroys both dogs and cats, regardless of which side of the great pet debate you fall on. The dog vs. cat framing — a running argument among friends growing up — becomes the entry point. You think you're playing along with something familiar. Instead you're inside something real. There's a third option, hidden in plain sight. The word "or" between the two choices is clickable. Press it and you find CatDog — a small reward for the curious, and a reminder that the divide was never the point. Built in HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, this project uses the most basic mechanics of the web — a choice, a click, a page turn — to do something that static design can't. The interactivity isn't decorative. It's the argument.