Drift Through The Submerged Signal FieldInteractive Underwater Experience
Five depth layers. Five distinct signals. Lock onto a layer and submerge into ambient interactive exploration.
Each signal drifts at its own depth
Scroll horizontally through the submerged signal field. Cards rise and fall with the current — hover to lock onto a layer.
Vertical descent into the signal cluster
Three drifts that shape the experience
Bioluminescent Drift
Soft signal sources move through every layer, casting calm chromatic atmospheres around interactive nodes.
Depth-Linked Interaction
Each session adapts its rhythm to the layer depth. Surface drifts feel airy; bathyal layers feel slow and luminous.
Ambient Sonar Map
Layers are not menus — they are submerged regions. The interface listens, pulses, and reveals as you move.
Pulses returning from the signal grid
How does the sonar interface work?
Each section of SocialSonar emits a sonar-style pulse that maps interactive depth layers. Moving between layers shifts visuals, ambience, and rhythm rather than traditional menu transitions.
Can I access the platform on mobile devices?
Yes. The interface adapts the radar, depth cards, and FAQ pulse nodes to vertical mobile flows while preserving the underwater feel.
Are sessions linked to external outcomes?
No. SocialSonar is an entertainment-only environment. There is no real-world value, no external linkage, and no off-platform redirection during experiences.
How is content organized in depth layers?
Content is arranged by ambient depth — surface drifts feel lighter and faster, while bathyal and abyssal layers feel slower and more luminous. Each layer is its own atmospheric region.
Do I need an account to dive in?
No account is required. Drift through any layer freely. The platform stores no session data and presents no profile system.
Deep Sea Disclaimer Layer
SocialSonar is a simulated underwater entertainment field intended for ambient exploration only. No real-world value, incentive structure, or external outcome is attached to any depth layer. Surface access is restricted to visitors aged 19 and over.