╭──────────────────────────────────╮
    │   T H E   E C H O   C H A M B E R   │
    │     ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·     │
    │    watch your words linger...     │
    ╰──────────────────────────────────╯

The Echo Chamber

~ Where words fade like sound in empty spaces ~

Cave Echo: Sounds layering in underground chambers

I am here
I am her · am here
I am he ·· I am her
I am ··· here
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~
~

Cave Echo: Underground chambers create complex, overlapping reflections. Your words split, merge, and layer as they find new passages to explore.

Enter the Chamber

Choose your space:









Try these:

Hello · Is anyone there? · Remember · I am here · Listen · Signal

On Echoes

An echo is a conversation with space. When you speak, the architecture answers—sometimes quickly, sometimes after a long pause. The character of the echo tells you about the shape of the emptiness around you.

In a cathedral, sound takes its time. It knows it has room to breathe, to rise, to linger among the high vaults before finally releasing. In a cave, echoes become confused—they split and reform, not quite remembering what they were. In an anechoic chamber, sound dies instantly, absorbed before it can reflect. The silence there is said to be disturbing.

We are, perhaps, echo chambers ourselves. Words enter us and bounce around, transformed by the shape of our inner architecture before emerging again, changed.

Echoes in Words

"An echo, while implying an enormity of space, at the same time also defines it, limits it, makes it into a place." — Mark Z. Danielewski

The Physics

Sound travels at roughly 343 meters per second at room temperature. An echo needs a surface at least 17 meters away to be distinguishable from the original sound—our brains merge sounds arriving within 50 milliseconds. This is why small rooms don't echo; they reverberate instead, the reflections blurring together into ambiance rather than distinct returns.

A cathedral echo can persist for seconds—sound bouncing between parallel stone surfaces, each reflection losing a little energy until it fades below the threshold of hearing. Digital systems can create perfect echoes that never degrade, which is why they often add artificial imperfection to sound more natural.