[best] — Ubgwtf.gitlab
Or worse—nothing at all. Have you stumbled across any strange, abandoned GitLab pages? Let me know in the comments below. Or don't. The void is patient.
ubgwtf.gitlab.io remains online. The GIF still fragments. The cursor still blinks (badly). And somewhere, a cron job that was supposed to delete this entire page five years ago is still waiting for its trigger. ubgwtf.gitlab
Maybe that is the lesson of ubgwtf . In a web obsessed with growth, engagement, and metrics, the most radical act is to build something that does nothing. To host something that means nothing. To maintain a digital footprint that leads nowhere. Or worse—nothing at all
The second commit, three years later: Updated the GIF because the old one wasn't fragmented enough. Or don't
At first glance, it looks like a typo. "UBG" usually stands for "Unblocked Games" in high school computer labs. "WTF" is the universal acronym for digital confusion. But together, prefixed to a GitLab static site? It felt like a key left under a digital doormat.

