: To lean into the archive aesthetic, the UI could occasionally "glitch" when hovering over certain files, revealing a hidden description or a snippet of "Nowaya" lore that isn't in the actual file metadata. How it looks in practice:

: Users can vote on whether a specific file is "Decent," "Mid," or "Trash." Over time, the archive dynamically reorganizes itself so the most "Decent" files rise to the top of the directory, while the "Trash" gets buried in a folder named REALLY_NOT_GOOD_STUFF .

: A small overlay that lets you leave "Post-it" style notes on specific files for future explorers (e.g., "I found this on a dead forum in 2019, don't ask why it's here" ).

One click might give you a rare piece of fan art; the next might give you a recipe for a mediocre sandwich. It turns a static folder into a

: A button that opens a completely random file from the zip—whether it’s a blurry .jpg , a 4-second .mp3 , or a cryptic .txt file. It adds a sense of "digital archaeology" to the user experience.

What’s the of the content inside? I can sharpen the feature to match if it’s more music, art, or meme-heavy.