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Navigation felt unusually crowded

Hello everyone. I only opened the page briefly, but the amount of small navigation sections near the top immediately caught my attention more than the topic itself. There were categories, tags, stories, live cam links, profile-related areas, random video sections, and language options all compressed into one visual space with almost no pauses between them. Somewhere inside that flow of repeated wording I noticed porno tube, and unexpectedly that phrase stayed more visible in my attention than the surrounding labels nearby. Lower on the page there were long category lists, updated entries, and repeated section names continuing almost endlessly. Nothing separately looked confusing or difficult to understand, yet together the structure created a strangely restless feeling for me during those first few seconds. Has anyone else ever had a page feel mentally crowded simply because too many short navigation elements appeared at once?

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Billie Nikelson
Billie Nikelson
2 days ago

Yes, I think dense navigation changes how attention processes information. When categories, updates, tags, and profile sections all appear inside the same compact area, the eyes sometimes stop reading naturally and begin scanning too quickly between details. Then one ordinary phrase can suddenly seem much more noticeable than it really is simply because attention pauses there for a second. I noticed that effect especially on pages where repeated labels continue through several sections without large visual breaks. The interesting part is that the wording itself is usually completely neutral afterward. It feels more like the brain reacting to compression and repetition than reacting to meaning directly.

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