Lucas Eyer

Quality Engineering Architect · Mobile · API · AI Systems · Distributed Platforms

Experimental 3D Portfolio

This is a portfolio, but you do not scroll it.

You walk through it. The whole thing is a virtual environment where projects are placed in space, navigation is gloriously non-linear, and the usual portfolio template is treated like a historical mistake.

3D interface, because flat scrolling was getting too comfortable
WASD navigation and click interactions inside the scene
Projects placed in space instead of stacked in polite little sections
VR Portfolio walkthrough preview

Philosophy

Developers are still presenting themselves like it is 2008.

This project takes that personally. Instead of another quiet page with sections, cards, and obedient scrolling, it turns the portfolio into a place you enter and explore.

Non-linear on purpose

This project rejects the usual resume-shaped website. You move, explore, and discover instead of following a pre-approved scroll path.

Interactive project space

Work appears as objects and panels inside a navigable environment, which makes the portfolio feel more like an experience than a document.

Experimental without pretending otherwise

The repo is honest about being experimental, and that is exactly the point. It is trying to make conventional portfolio UX feel embarrassingly old.

Controls

Keyboard, mouse, mild curiosity.

W A S D to move
Mouse to look around
Click to interact

If you get lost, that is not necessarily a bug. It may just be the project keeping its promise.

What Is Inside

A scene, not a sitemap.

Three.js and react-three-fiberCustom interaction systemGitHub Pages with custom domainObservability room still warming up

There is even an observability room in progress, which is a very elegant way of saying the weird part is already there and the next weird part is loading.

Positioning

Built for anyone who thinks a portfolio should feel closer to a world than a worksheet.

VR Portfolio is less interested in being conventional and more interested in being memorable. Which, frankly, seems like the correct priority.