Applying the CSS "@supports (display: grid) { .wrapper > tbody, .wrapper > tbody > tr { display: contents; } }" with wild abandon in GeoCities HTML table-based layout templates optimized for Internet Explorer 3 and/or Netscape Navigator 3 to make them pleasant on sub-VGA pocket screens while still remaining optimized for those early browsers and every desktop browser since: from IE3 to Edge 125, and from NN3 to Firefox 128.
Mozilla Developer Network, "Realizing common layouts using grids": https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Guides/Grid_layout/Common_grid_layouts
Reading guides like that while lamenting the shortcomings of vintage Web browsing, even via RetroZilla in a Windows 98SE VM, does strange things to a girl, y'know?
Related: CSS grids are 3 years older than Chromium-based Microsoft Edge and only 2 years younger than EdgeHTML (Trident)-based Microsoft Edge Legacy.
I am learning so much modern CSS for features that most websites rely on slower JS to achieve, and I'm learning how to shield modern CSS's side effects from older and early popular browsers.
This is so much more labor than I expected, using every age of CSS to make CSS-free HTML layout table pages look better and responsive, but it's a labor of love. And joy. And bliss.
I may be going back *way* too far. My template is looking nice even in IE2, but since IE2 predates HTTP/1.1 by about 5 years, it can't connect to any website but the default on a virtual host Web server.