We ❤️ 88x31
The retro hit counter badge, back from the dead
Pick a style
The incredibly complex setup
Paste the snippet
Add the HTML embed code anywhere on your page. It's just an image tag — no JavaScript required.
Visitors load the badge
Each time a new visitor loads your page, the badge image is requested and they're counted automatically.
You're awesome
You already were, obviously. But now you're awesome with a tiny retro counter to prove it.
Today's top sites
| # | Domain | Today | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | fedorov.net | 6 | 665 |
| 2. | █████████████████ | 4 | 14 |
| 3. | █████████████ | 3 | 36 |
| 4. | xidgie.neocities.org | 2 | 297 |
| 5. | █████████ | 2 | 33 |
| 6. | kamome.pet | 2 | 145 |
| 7. | axlraimi.nekoweb.org | 1 | 238 |
Updates every 2 minutes. Verify your domain to unmask it.
Privacy first
Your badge sets no cookies, starts no sessions, and stores no visitor data. I count unique visitors using bloom filters — a clever counting trick that can check if someone was already counted today, but can never be reversed to identify who visited. The filter resets every day.
The only information I keep per site is two numbers: today's unique count and the all-time total. That's it.
This landing page does run Google Analytics so I know if anyone actually shows up. The irony is not lost on me. Your badge doesn't touch any of that though.