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community update

plusone survey

our friends at plusone are doing their first yearly survey of the incremental game community!
if you have a few minutes, i'm sure they'd love it if you took the time to fill it out.

website update

better cloud saves (and more!)

you can now upload files to cloud save, and download cloud saves as files.
we've also rolled out a new look to the bar below games, some new tweaks in the sidebar, and a "continue playing" row on the homepage. for logged in users only

(*・ω・)ノ

galaxy.click is an open-source website for finding incremental games, socializing with others, and having fun.

website update

notified tags and oauth

some odd new features and a recap of what's been forgotten.

website update

game completion

you can now mark games as complete!
a little checkbox will appear next to the game, and it'll change to a different icon when the game has had an update.
the page formerly dedicated to game playtime now lets you manage completions and favorites, too.

support the site

patreon

if you love galaxy, consider helping it thrive for years to come, and get the donator flair and more in return.

features

cloud saving

take advantage of free cloud saving for every game on galaxy.
some games may even have it built-in, thanks to our cloud saving API!

developers

we're open-source

the source code for galaxy has been made available for anyone to read or modify however they see fit.

galaxy labs

galaxy cluster

cram multiple incrementals on screen at once, and tile them to best fit your needs.
currently, it's only a proof-of-concept. who knows where it'll go in the future?

developers

we ❤ developers

we know your struggles—making games is hard.
we've spent months making a site worthy of your games.

features

chat on galaxy

chat with other people on galaxy in real-time. for free, forever.

Dbz Magazines.7z File

The file was named "DBZ Magazines.7z," a nondescript 400MB archive sitting in the corner of an old hard drive. For Leo, it was a digital time capsule. He clicked "Extract," and as the progress bar crawled across the screen, he felt like he was unearthing a buried chest of gold from the late 90s.

The folder burst open, revealing hundreds of high-resolution scans. These weren't just magazines; they were the frontline reports of the Great Saiyan Invasion of the West. He opened the first PDF—a 1998 issue of Animerica . The cover featured Goku, mid-shout, with the headline: "The Saiyans are Coming! Can Earth Survive?" DBZ Magazines.7z

Leo scrolled through the pages, the vibrant, slightly grainy advertisements for VHS tapes and "imported" action figures triggering a wave of nostalgia. He remembered the era of the "Orange Bricks" and the agonizing wait for the next episode on Toonami. In these pages, the mystery of the "Pink Buu" was still a playground rumor, and the concept of a "Super Saiyan 3" was treated with the reverence of a religious prophecy. The file was named "DBZ Magazines

There were fan art sections where kids—now likely in their 40s—had sent in colored-pencil drawings of Gohan. There were "Power Level" charts that debated the scientific accuracy of a fictional universe. Most precious were the grainy photos from Japanese conventions, showing a future of Dragon Ball GT that felt like a strange, forbidden dream to American fans at the time. The folder burst open, revealing hundreds of high-resolution

As Leo closed the laptop hours later, the room felt different. The "DBZ Magazines.7z" file wasn't just data; it was a map of his childhood. He hadn't just looked at pictures; he had traveled back to a time when a screaming blonde warrior was the most important thing in the world.