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@jordanblake11
Jordan Blake — UX designer and behavioral interface researcher. Based in Austin, I work at the intersection of design, neuro-gaming models, and digital ethics. I collaborate with megapariaviator.com, studying how interfaces influence decision-making in fast-paced scenarios. I write about visual rhythm, latent triggers, and how design reflects human response.
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Late-night design sessions and game testing marathons have become my norm lately. There’s something hypnotic about syncing UI animations to music, especially when working on crash game interfaces for megapariaviator.com. Every click, every flicker, every multiplier surge — it all needs rhythm.
These projects push my focus to the limit but also help me explore new intersections between sound, motion, and decision-making. If you’ve ever designed under a ticking clock or tracked user reactions frame by frame, you know the thrill.
Curious — do you design better in silence or with a soundtrack? Let’s talk workflow rituals.🎧 Late-night design sessions and game testing marathons have become my norm lately. There’s something hypnotic about syncing UI animations to music, especially when working on crash game interfaces for megapariaviator.com. Every click, every flicker, every multiplier surge — it all needs rhythm. These projects push my focus to the limit but also help me explore new intersections between sound, motion, and decision-making. If you’ve ever designed under a ticking clock or tracked user reactions frame by frame, you know the thrill. Curious — do you design better in silence or with a soundtrack? Let’s talk workflow rituals. 🎶0 Commentarios ·0 Acciones ·56 Views ·0 Vista previa -
Sounds of Focus: Music That Helps Me Write
Sometimes the brightest ideas come in total silence. But more often — when something hypnotic, electronic, rhythmic is playing in my headphones. I’ve spent a long time searching for the perfect background for work and finally built my own tracklist — the kind of atmosphere that keeps concentration sharp.
If you’re writing or coding too, try mixing ambient, lo-fi beats, and glitchy instrumentals. From the first track, your brain slips into flow.
Right now I’m testing how these audio backgrounds affect behavior in interactive scenarios. We’re exploring this at megapariaviator.com — how music impacts risk-taking and the moment of exit in crash mechanics. The results are fascinating. Will share more soon.
#music #focus #research #megapariaviator #flow🎧 Sounds of Focus: Music That Helps Me Write Sometimes the brightest ideas come in total silence. But more often — when something hypnotic, electronic, rhythmic is playing in my headphones. I’ve spent a long time searching for the perfect background for work and finally built my own tracklist — the kind of atmosphere that keeps concentration sharp. If you’re writing or coding too, try mixing ambient, lo-fi beats, and glitchy instrumentals. From the first track, your brain slips into flow. 🟢 Right now I’m testing how these audio backgrounds affect behavior in interactive scenarios. We’re exploring this at megapariaviator.com — how music impacts risk-taking and the moment of exit in crash mechanics. The results are fascinating. Will share more soon. #music #focus #research #megapariaviator #flow0 Commentarios ·0 Acciones ·55 Views ·0 Vista previa -
The Rhythm Behind Every Click
What if interface design isn’t just about clarity, but about choreography?
Lately, while working with the team at megapariaviator.com, I’ve been deep in the data of crash games — those fast, high-risk environments where every click is a decision under pressure. What we’ve noticed? Timing is rarely random. Players internalize rhythm, even when they don't consciously recognize it. A slight flicker. A color pulse. A micro-delay. It all feeds into what I’ve started calling interface tempo.
When you design with that tempo in mind, you're not just placing buttons — you're setting beats.
I’ll be sharing more soon, including sketches and test results. But for now: think about the last time you hesitated before clicking. Was it hesitation… or a missed beat?
#InterfaceTempo #UXResearch #CrashGames #DesignThinkingThe Rhythm Behind Every Click What if interface design isn’t just about clarity, but about choreography? Lately, while working with the team at megapariaviator.com, I’ve been deep in the data of crash games — those fast, high-risk environments where every click is a decision under pressure. What we’ve noticed? Timing is rarely random. Players internalize rhythm, even when they don't consciously recognize it. A slight flicker. A color pulse. A micro-delay. It all feeds into what I’ve started calling interface tempo. When you design with that tempo in mind, you're not just placing buttons — you're setting beats. I’ll be sharing more soon, including sketches and test results. But for now: think about the last time you hesitated before clicking. Was it hesitation… or a missed beat? #InterfaceTempo #UXResearch #CrashGames #DesignThinking0 Commentarios ·0 Acciones ·56 Views ·0 Vista previa -
0 Commentarios ·0 Acciones ·59 Views ·0 Vista previa
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