My Parking Lot
Gold Miner
Bubblez!
Sea Plumber
Merge Memes
Clickz!
Santa Snake
GTA Quiz
Nina - Surfer Girl
Onet Mahjong Connect
Baby Chicco Adventures
Rally Champ
Ball Paint 3D
Snake Ball
BFFs City Chic Fashion
Ghost Range Sniper
Pixel Differences
Handless-Millionaire
Treasures of the Mystic Sea
Midnight Mansion
Puppy Blast Lite
Ultimate PK
Baby Happy Cleaning
Stickman Biker
Venice Carnival Party
TickTock Puzzle Challenge
Stickman Hero Skibidi Tower Defense
Bartender: The Right Mix
Pumpkin Muffins
Flower Jam
Maze & labyrinth
Teen Bold and Fun
I Am Security
Italian Brainrot Differences
Daily Guess
Hidden Library Game
Mahjong Blitz
Guess Brainrot
Word Search Universe
Legends John Wicked
BFFs Kimono Fashion
Minecraft Sandbox
FNF: Funkin' on the Heights
Stickman Warfare
Memory Mahjong
Tropical Merge
Woody Block Puzzles
Blonde Sofia: Camp Time
Bob The Robber
Bounce And Escape
Squad Tower
Ludo Life
Iphone 13 Repair
Italian Brainrot Coloring Book
Number Bubble Shooter
Effing Worms 2
Animal Differences
Super Race 3D
Duck
Scrap Kings
Mining Simulator
Tung Tung Sahur Big Stick
Blocks Stack Rush
Solitaire Reverse
Romance Academy — Heartbeat of Love
Pets Rush
Whooo?
Hoop Kings
The Simpsons: Find the Difference
Princess' Pup Rescue
Pro Billiards
Survival Master 3D
The underlying technology that makes HTML5 games possible is a combination of HTML and JavaScript. Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) was part of the early Internet superhighway as they called it back then and has continued to be used to serve every website today. JavaScript code was added to second version browsers like Netscape 2.0 in 1995 and has evolved over the years to become more pleasant to read and write. In the early days, it was referred to as DHTML or dynamic HTML because it allowed for interactive content without a page refresh. However, it was difficult to learn and use in the early web era. Over time, Javascript with the help of the Google Chrome developers became one of the fastest scripting languages. It also has more freely available modules, libraries, and scripts than any other coding language.
The early DHTML games were very simple. Some examples of the games back then were 3d games right in a browser.