Fan Meter – A movie quiz game where you guess films from frames
Geoguessr-style movie guessing, but the quiz-game space has Letterboxd, Sporcle, and established competitors.

Game-engine movie UX is delightful, but feature set is just search and drag-drop.
Movie enthusiasts; casual film discovery and Six Degrees-style exploration games.
Letterboxd · IMDb · Rotten Tomatoes
For example, start with Quentin Tarantino’s movies in Column 1, put the cast of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood in Column 2, then put Brad Pitt’s entire filmography in Column 3. Keep going as long as you want, building a "chain" ala Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon.
I was frustrated that all popular movie websites are page-oriented: one HTML page per movie or person. I asked myself what a movie site designed in 2026 would look like, in an era when full-screen canvas sites like Miro are common. And then asked what if the site was built on a game engine? I used PixiJS.
I ingested TMDB movie data into my own SQLite database head of time, so there are no external API calls at runtime. This was necessary because opening a board with 100's of columns would exceed rate limits. My read-only SQLite DB lives on a Fly volume, attached to my Fly machine.
Most of the hard engineering was making the boards virtual, so we materialize only the columns currently visible. This keeps the site at 60Hz even on huge boards.
Some pre-made board:
2025 Oscar Winners: https://movie-chain.com/boards/oscars-2025
All of Christopher Nolan's movies: https://movie-chain.com/boards/christopher-nolan
Top movies of 1999: https://movie-chain.com/boards/top-rated-1999
Experience using Claude Code to build the site: https://tobeva.com/articles/chess-simul/
Geoguessr-style movie guessing, but the quiz-game space has Letterboxd, Sporcle, and established competitors.
Single-movie fan site when IMDb, BookMyShow, and Wikipedia already cover this comprehensively.
Maps where films actually shot and calculates how fast characters must've moved — turns a small gripe about Hollywood geography into a clickable, oddly addictive exploration. The left-hand film roster, map pins, walking-tour generator and 'impossible speed' math make it both shareable and nerdy-fun; built client-side with Leaflet/Mapbox, so interactions feel snappy. Expand to TV, per-scene screenshots, or richer filters and this could be a long-lived fetish site for cinephiles.
Daily movie trivia with no sign-up stats via a magic link.
257 films distilled to color wormholes with music generated from palettes.
Comprehensive Albion database beats wikis, but audience capped at one game's playerbase.