The barrier to entry is low enough for anyone to create just about anything: just use an open-source program like Twine or Inform and start writing. The scope can be as big as the universe or as small as a room. Some games are even made on popular multiple-choice quiz sites, such as Uquiz. ‘What Colour Are You?’ by Sphenoid is a quiz that begins with typical personality questions (‘How would your friends describe you? Do you like pineapple on pizza?’) but subverts the players expectations with questions that display only blank answers, questions that are no longer questions but internal dialogues, questions which lead the player into a fully-fledged labyrinth, accompanied with hand-drawn visuals. Only once you find your way out of the labyrinth you learn what colour you are. In all of these games the form is there to be played with. Creators of digital fiction delight in setting up structures only to burst out of them, creating fissures in assumed realities, exposing the wiring beneath the computer screen.