Simple local rules — living worlds that build themselves
A tiny rule, applied to every cell at once, again and again — and structure blooms out of nothing. Explore Wolfram's 256 elementary rules drawn as glowing spacetime triangles, then flip to Conway's Game of Life and watch gliders fly. Draw, run, pause, and play.
A cellular automaton is a grid of cells that all update together from a simple local rule — each cell just looks at its neighbors and decides to be on or off. Do that step after step, and tiny rules grow into snowflakes, triangles, gliders, and chaos. It is one of the most surprising ideas in all of math.