Celebrities Get Ready for Christmas
Big City Greens Haywire Harvest
Digger Ball 2
Fire Trucks Differences
Turmoil Deluxe
Dead Zed
DoomCraft
Undone
Desktop Only
Water Color
Indigo Satellite
Desktop Only
Hit or Knit
Merge Gangster Cars
Speechbubblia
Northern Heights
Paper Doll for Girls: Dress Up
Balloons
Car Garage Differences
Supernoob Prison Easter
PicoPusher
Dungeon Quest
Back to Candyland 2
Fly or Die
Zombie Shooter
Desktop Only
Love Bubbles
Zumar Deluxe
Desktop Only
Brick. Drop. Bash
Park the Taxi 3
FNF vs Lord X Wrath: Revulsion
Desktop Only
Farm Triple Match
Golf Puzzle
Bubble Shooter Africa
Subway Clash 3D
Desktop Only
Golden Scarabaeus
Cursor Drifter
Solitaire Story Tripeaks 3
Dynamons 10
Moto X3M
Bladebearer: Recarved
Desktop Only
Divide New
Sepbox v3 Return
Sprinter
Desktop Only
Fun Game Play Bubble Shooter
Minecraft Coin Adventure
Belt It
Teen Cafe Date
Super Uncle Tennis: World Tour
Desktop Only
Fairyland Pic Puzzles
Dungeon Clash
Mahjong at Home: Scandinavian Winter Edition
Bouncy Woods
Abyss
Desktop Only
Stunt Dirt Bike
Desktop Only
GeoQuest
Mao Mao: Dragon Duel
True Love Test
Slash Knight
Desktop Only
Pirates Match: The Lost Treasure
Beecoins Inc
Cha-Ching Lucky Draw
Back to Candyland 1
Solitaire Garden
Noob vs Rainbow Friends
Hidden Animals
Colorbox Mustard
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 Tic-Tac-Toe and snake. as games made with this technology use the open standard of html5, these relatively ancient games are still playable today in a modern web browser. these technologies have moved to the forefront of browser games because they don't require plugins and are safer to play than older technologies. html5 games also support mobile devices and the capability has improved to support complex 2d and 3d games right in a browser.