The Internet Archive made it easier to search for ’90s-era GIFs. GifCities contains millions of animations from the decade of flannel shirts and Soup Nazis. The GIFs were pulled from old GeoCities webpages, which (mostly) bit the dust in 2009.
The new version of GifCities is much easier to search. You can now search semantically, based on the animation’s content. In other words, it’s much more likely to bring up the topic or scene you’re looking for by describing it. In GifCities’ old version, you could only search by file name. (If you’re feeling masochistic, you can still access that version under a “Special search” tab.)
The updated GifCities also now uses pagination. That’s a good thing, as the old version’s infinite scrolling could make for slow browsing. You can also create and share “GifGrams.” As the name suggests, these are custom e-greetings made from those ancient GIFs.
The Internet Archive launched GifCities in 2016 to celebrate its 20th anniversary. If you’re too young to know, GeoCities was the quintessential early internet web-hosting service. A precursor to social media, it was full of embarrassing fan pages, personal photo albums and “Under construction” GIFs. (You’ll find plenty of the latter in this search engine.) Yahoo pulled the plug on most of GeoCities in 2009. (Disclosure: That’s Engadget’s parent company.) However, the Japanese version survived for another decade.
If you’re of a certain age, you’ll likely enjoy browsing the archive. (Or, learn what passed for internet humor before you were born!) Just note that many results are NSFW. I made the mistake of searching for “Mr. T,” and I will now leave you to douse my eyes with bleach.