A corridor longer than the screen
Infinite Hallway Illusion uses perspective, repetition, and motion to make the browser stage feel like a corridor that keeps going. The scene is flat on your device, but the repeated frames or wall shapes suggest distance. That is the core of the illusion. Look toward the center and the hallway seems to extend beyond the visible page. Move or interact and the depth shifts, making the corridor feel like it is alive rather than a static drawing.
The page works best when the center stays readable. If the scene turns too quickly, the hallway can become a pattern instead of a space. Slow changes make the effect stronger because the eye has time to follow the repeated shapes inward. The illusion depends on rhythm: near frame, smaller frame, smaller frame, and so on. Each repetition tells the eye that there is more distance ahead.
How to strengthen the depth
Focus on the vanishing area for a moment before moving. Then make a small adjustment and notice how the walls seem to slide. Try not to over-steer. A steady view lets the hallway feel longer. Reset when the visual path becomes too tilted or busy. The best frames usually have clear side lines, a visible center, and enough contrast to separate one layer of the hallway from the next.
Infinite Hallway Illusion deserves specific content because it is about simulated depth, not just abstract motion. It gives users a quick way to experience a classic perspective trick inside an interactive browser page. Use it as a visual break, a hypnotic scene, or a source for a dramatic corridor-like screenshot. The content belongs here because the page is dedicated to repetition, vanishing points, and the strange feeling that a small rectangle of screen can contain a hallway that keeps extending forward.
Infinite Hallway Illusion now includes clearer guidance around vanishing points and repeated corridor layers. The supplement explains why a steady center view makes the effect stronger and why fast movement can flatten the illusion into a pattern. That is specific to this page and useful to the visitor. It also helps distinguish the hallway from tunnel and zoom tools: this one is about architectural depth, side lines, frames, and the feeling that a corridor extends beyond the screen.
The hallway illusion also rewards stillness. When the viewer stops moving the scene, the repeated frames have time to create distance. That advice is specific to a corridor illusion and gives users a better chance to feel the depth effect clearly.