The screen on GM’s laptop remained exactly as he’d left it — still on 2D display mode (like a normal computer), open to Google Images as he searched for some design inspiration. Interestingly enough, though, the browser he’d been using hardly seemed recognizable as any browser the roleplayers would know. It had all the basic buttons that a browser should have — an address bar, tabs, bookmarks, etc — but the exact layout didn’t seem to resemble Chrome, Firefox, or any other well-known browser. Even scrolling down to the grid-globe icon resting on the taskbar didn’t seem to help any, as the program’s name was apparently only “Browser”. …Speaking of which, was the word “taskbar” even appropriate? Sure, the thing seemed to fulfill the basic function of a Windows taskbar or an OSX dock, but was the computer a PC or a Mac? Or neither? Sure enough, it didn’t seem to resemble any well-known operating system, either, and the machine itself wasn’t marked with any sort of logo to distinguish itself as any familiar, “real” computer brand. At any rate, the not-taskbar seemed awfully bare, besides. It contained only a scarce few icons: “Browser”, a Windows Explorer-esque graphic simply labeled “Files”, “Settings”, and a graphic resembling a swirling ball of violet aura labeled “Designer” — still running, by the looks of things. It was up to Leon what he wanted to poke around in first.