1KB JavaScript Demoscene Challenge Just Launched

103 points by babakode 11 hours ago

I just launched JS1024 — a creative coding challenge with a strict limit: 1024 bytes of JavaScript.

No libraries. No frameworks. Just raw code.

You can submit visual effects, generative art, tiny games, synths, or whatever you can fit into 1KB of JavaScript.

https://js1024.fun/

Think of it as a spiritual successor to JS1k or the 4k demoscene — with a modern twist.

Would love feedback, ideas, or help spreading the word. And if you’ve ever made a tiny JS demo, please share — I’d love to see it.

averageRoyalty 8 hours ago

Why did you use ChatGPT to write your submission text? I can't speak for everyone, but it makes me much less likely to check out your project as I have less faith in it.

  • lxe an hour ago

    It's not just a submission —— it's a testament to the rich tapestry of prompting.

  • babakode 7 hours ago

    Yes that is true! But the reason is because I do not know english that good I'm not an english speaker, sorry for making the post look spammish

    • averageRoyalty 7 hours ago

      That's fair! I think your english is coming across great by the way. Appreciate the honesty!

  • wilkystyle 6 hours ago

    How did you know OP used ChatGPT?

    • nateb2022 6 hours ago

      Three emdash's, "spiritual successor", "modern twist."

      • gbraad 4 hours ago

        So I can't use em dashes, without people thinking I am a bot? :-o. But have to say, the "modern twist" is a weird addition that is not natural. There is nothing modern about it.

        • jamesfinlayson 2 hours ago

          Apparently not - a non-technical family member told me this exact thing on the weekend.

binarymax 8 hours ago

Participated in the first two JS1ks. Thanks for bringing this back! Having some nostalgia. I can't believe this is 15 years old already: https://js1k.com/2010-first/demo/688

Thanks for keeping the JS demoscene alive!

  • whynotmaybe 5 hours ago

    > use your mouse to try and click the evading squares

    2010's reality seems so close and yet so distant at the same time while trying to click it with duckduckgo on an android.

  • babakode 8 hours ago

    My pleasure. I love seeing people being creative

xnx 10 hours ago

Given the amount of features built-in to modern browsers, there should be some very impressive things possible in 1K.

There have been a few cool Javascript things in 140 characters: https://www.dwitter.net/

mr_sturd 7 hours ago

This is great! I remember taking part in the first JS1K competition. For some reason, I wrote most of the code semi "optimised" before running it through a "proper" optimiser. Good times!

https://js1k.com/2010-first/details/133

econ 11 hours ago

It is unclear if it must be canvas or if using the Dom is allowed.

  • skhameneh 10 hours ago

    I found it clear after reading the page, the “Demo Categories & Shim Details” gives three different options.

    In short, canvas is not required, using the DOM is allowed.

  • moritzwarhier 10 hours ago

    > You can submit visual effects, generative art, tiny games, synths, or whatever you can fit into 1KB of JavaScript.

    There is no mention of canvas

  • nomel 10 hours ago

    I think any local restrictions, beyond the 1024 character limit, would go against the spirit of it all.

  • babakode 8 hours ago

    There is two web technologies shims: HTML and Canvas

zamadatix 9 hours ago

Happy to see another year!

I think it'd be nice if the rest of the shims were dropped too. "1024 bytes of JavaScript. No libraries. No frameworks. Just raw code". Year by year it's getting easier to do more in the same amount of bytes. Last year's 1st place winner was a plain HTML entry which implemented its own canvas. 8 of all 148 entries 2020-2024 have used the shader shim, fewer than used the deprecated p5js shim in 2020. The categories/category winners are cool but it should be based on what approach was used rather than which framework they started with. E.g. "Sand and Water" is the "js winner" solely because it used the shim and "Splash Dash" didn't but really Splash Dash won both overall and won the js canvas category too, it just did it without the free bytes from the canvas framework.

mg794613 10 hours ago

Did that site just got "slashdotted"? Because none of the examples want to load atm.

  • babakode 8 hours ago

    It's working for me. All of them. There is no demos submitted for 2025 edition yet tho

revskill 9 hours ago

Js is fun.

  • cies 9 hours ago

    I wonder is someone truly believing this is a good hire ("the new hire can do the JS!") or a bad hire (as in: no clue what a fun programming language is like, or "must have never used JS in anger").