Interactive simulations as Gutenberg blocks — explore dynamics, emergence, and control through hands-on visual models.
This simulation runs entirely in the browser. No backend. No canvas hacks. Just rules, state, and time.
Six simulations
Click to shuffle through the demos. Replace the images with screenshots once you’re ready.
Conway’s Game of Life
A classic cellular automaton where simple rules create complex and often surprising emergent behaviour. Draw your own starting patterns and watch the system evolve over time.
Forest Fire Automaton
A stylised model of wildfire dynamics. Trees grow, lightning strikes, and fire spreads across the grid. Adjust growth and lightning probabilities to explore cycles of growth, destruction, and recovery.
Epidemic Spread (SIR)
A grid-based SIR-style model of infection spread. Each agent can be susceptible, infectious, or recovered. Tune infection probability, recovery time, and immunity to see how outbreaks start, peak, and fade.
Diffusion / Heat Map
A continuous field model for diffusion. Each cell holds a scalar “heat” value. Create hot spots, adjust diffusion and decay, and watch how the field smooths out or cools down over time.
Elementary Cellular Automata
One-dimensional rules such as Rule 30, Rule 90, and Rule 110. Start from a simple initial row and watch how a single line of cells generates rich triangular and fractal patterns over time.
Logistic Map (Growth & Chaos)
The discrete-time population model xn+1 = r·xn(1 – xn). Slide the parameter r to travel from stable equilibrium through period-doubling into chaotic behaviour, and see how a simple formula generates complex dynamics.
Three angles
Each simulation can be explored through different lenses — replace these with your “tabs” screenshots.
BeeSeen is a Gutenberg block plugin that adds a small library of premium, motion-driven image effects — built to stay fast, theme-friendly, and usable in real websites.
It’s not a heavy “gallery app”. It’s a set of focused blocks you can drop into any page: orbit, tilt, reveal, depth, accordion, shuffle… each effect is intentionally restrained, so the site feels alive without looking gimmicky.
What you get
Interactive image blocks (hover, scroll, drag)
Theme-neutral styling (your theme stays in control)
Performance-first (mostly transforms & opacity)
Accessibility-aware (prefers-reduced-motion, focusable controls where needed)
Clean editor experience: pick images, tweak a few meaningful parameters, publish
How it’s built
BeeSeen is written as a modern Gutenberg block plugin. Blocks are authored in JavaScript, bundled via an npm build, and registered the standard WordPress way. Effects are implemented with small, targeted scripts per block — no giant frameworks running on every page.
Blocks (editor + frontend)
Scoped CSS so it doesn’t fight your theme
Progressive enhancement: content remains meaningful even if motion is reduced
Try the live demos
This post is the overview. The full interactive playground (all blocks + parameters) lives on the BeeSeen demo page.
Select part of the SVG, and apply a predefined animation
to insert your animation in your web site, you just need to add it as a block
Why an animated SVG logo can improve your website
A logo is often the first visual element people connect with on a website. It represents your business, your style, and the feeling you want to leave behind. When it is used well, a small animation can make that identity feel more alive, more memorable, and more intentional.
This does not mean turning a website into a cartoon. The goal is not movement for its own sake. The goal is to use motion carefully, where it adds clarity, personality, and meaning.
Screenshots:
Settings : BeeSVG Assets
Open the Settings menu , choose the BeeSvg Assets setting
Settings : BeeSVG Tools
Open the Tools menu , choose the BeeSvg Inspector tool
The BeeSvg Inspector tool help you to assign some predifined animation to some objects of the SVG structure
Block Editor : BeeSVG Block
Open the Block Editor and use the + to insert a Block, choose the BeeSvg Assets block
Use the drop “asset slug” combo to choose one of the picture you have
Why an animated SVG logo can improve your website
A logo is often the first visual element people connect with on a website. It represents your business, your style, and the feeling you want to leave behind. When it is used well, a small animation can make that identity feel more alive, more memorable, and more intentional.
This does not mean turning a website into a cartoon. The goal is not movement for its own sake. The goal is to use motion carefully, where it adds clarity, personality, and meaning.
What an SVG logo can do better
SVG is an ideal format for logos on the web because it stays sharp at every size. It looks clean on mobile, tablet, and desktop, and it can be animated without becoming heavy or blurred like many image-based alternatives.
For a business website, this offers several concrete advantages. An SVG logo can stay crisp, adapt well to modern layouts, and support subtle animation that feels elegant rather than distracting. It is a good choice when you want your site to feel custom and carefully designed.
Sharp and clean on every screen size
Lightweight compared with video or GIF-based animation
Easy to integrate into a modern website design
Suitable for subtle, refined motion
Reusable across pages, sections, and calls to action
Why this matters for your visitors
Visitors often decide within seconds whether a site feels trustworthy, clear, and professional. Small details make a difference. A well-integrated animated logo can help a site feel more polished and more distinctive, especially when the movement supports the meaning of the brand.
It can help guide attention, reinforce a message, and give the impression that the website was designed with care rather than assembled from generic pieces.
It helps make a brand more memorable
It adds personality without overloading the page
It can draw attention to an important section or action
It supports a more modern and professional visual identity
Examples of what an animated logo can express
The meaning behind the symbol
Some logos represent an idea, not just a shape. When that idea is shown in motion, the message becomes stronger. A logo with moving parts can communicate cooperation, precision, technical work, progress, or transformation more clearly than a still image.
Here, the animation gives direct meaning to the symbol. The movement helps explain the visual concept instead of leaving it abstract.
A flexible variation of the same brand
One of the strengths of SVG is that a logo can have several versions without losing its identity. A business can use a more complete animated version in one place and a simpler variation elsewhere, while still keeping the same visual language.
This makes it possible to adapt the same logo to different sections of a website: homepage, service pages, document links, featured content blocks, or calls to action.
When this can be useful on a website
An animated SVG logo can be useful when a business wants to strengthen its identity without making the page heavy or intrusive. It works especially well when the logo has a clear symbolic meaning or when the site needs a more custom visual presence.
On a homepage hero section
Near an important link or call to action
Inside a services or presentation section
As a visual marker for downloadable content or featured information
As part of a more distinctive and memorable brand presentation
A good animated logo is not about showing off
The best result is usually subtle. A good animated logo does not shout for attention. It supports the brand, improves the visual experience, and helps a website feel more finished.
When used with care, SVG animation is not just a technical feature. It is a design tool that can make a website clearer, more expressive, and more memorable for the people who visit it.