Web Design That Actually Works on Every Device
We've spent years watching users struggle with websites that don't adapt. Our approach builds digital experiences that respond to how people actually browse—whether they're on a phone during their commute or at a desktop in their office.
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What Makes Adaptive Design Different
Most websites just shrink content to fit smaller screens. That's not enough anymore. Real adaptive design means rethinking how content flows, how users interact, and what matters most at each breakpoint.
Content Priority Shifts
On mobile, users want quick answers. Desktop visitors often need more detail. We restructure your content hierarchy so each device serves its audience properly—not just a scaled-down version of the same thing.
Touch vs. Click Interfaces
Buttons that work with a mouse pointer don't always work with fingertips. We design interaction zones that feel natural whether you're tapping, swiping, or clicking. The interface adapts to the input method.
Performance Across Networks
Taiwan has excellent internet infrastructure, but your users might be on 4G during their commute or using older devices. We build sites that load fast regardless of connection quality or hardware capabilities.
Real Device Testing
Emulators only tell part of the story. Before launch, we test on actual phones, tablets, and computers—different browsers, different operating systems. If your users can access it, we've checked it works properly.

Why We Start With Mobile
Most businesses still think "desktop first" because that's how they browse at work. But here's what we've learned from years of analytics data: over 65% of first visits happen on mobile devices now.
When you design for mobile first, you're forced to focus on what really matters. There's no room for fluff or secondary content cluttering the experience. Everything needs a clear purpose.
Then, as screens get larger, we progressively enhance. Desktop becomes the place for deeper exploration, additional context, and richer functionality—not just more whitespace around the same mobile layout.
This isn't just theory. We've rebuilt sites using this approach and watched bounce rates drop by 40% while mobile conversions climbed. Users stay longer because the experience feels purpose-built for their device.
Technical Capabilities That Matter
Adaptive design requires more than visual adjustments. Here's what we handle so your site performs across every context your users encounter.
Responsive Frameworks
We build custom grid systems that flex naturally across breakpoints, avoiding the bloat of generic frameworks while maintaining consistent structure.
Viewport Optimization
Each screen size gets its own optimized layout—not just scaled versions. Content reorganizes intelligently based on available space and user context.
Cross-Browser Compatibility
Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge—even older versions. We test thoroughly and implement fallbacks so your site works consistently everywhere.
Touch Gestures
Swipe navigation, pinch-to-zoom controls, and tap targets sized for actual fingers. Mobile interactions that feel intuitive, not frustrating.
Load Performance
Image optimization, lazy loading, efficient code—we keep file sizes minimal so pages load quickly even on slower mobile connections.
Accessibility Standards
Screen readers, keyboard navigation, proper contrast ratios. We build sites that everyone can use, regardless of how they access the web.
The Breakpoint Strategy Nobody Talks About
Most developers use standard breakpoints: 320px, 768px, 1024px, 1440px. We used to do the same thing.
But then we started analyzing real traffic patterns from Taiwan-based sites. Turns out, there's a significant cluster of users on 375px and 414px devices—modern phones that fall between the traditional "mobile" breakpoints.
Now we design content-first breakpoints. Instead of arbitrary pixel widths, we let the content itself dictate when layout needs to change. If a headline breaks awkwardly at 680px, that becomes a breakpoint.
This approach takes more time upfront. But the result is layouts that feel natural at every size, not just the standard device categories.

The Tablet Problem
Tablets are the awkward middle child of responsive design. Too big for mobile layouts, too small for desktop experiences.
We've found that treating tablets as "wide mobile" works better than "small desktop." Users hold tablets more casually than laptops. They expect touch interactions and simpler navigation—just with more visible content than phones offer.
So our tablet layouts prioritize touch-friendly elements and simplified menus while taking advantage of the extra screen real estate for content density.
Future-Proofing Flexibility
New devices appear constantly—foldable phones, ultra-wide monitors, mixed reality browsers. You can't predict every screen size.
That's why we build fluid systems using relative units and flexible containers. Your site shouldn't just work on today's devices—it should adapt gracefully to whatever comes next without requiring a redesign.
This isn't about being trendy. It's about not wasting your budget on constant rebuilds every time device standards shift.
Who Builds These Sites
We're a small team in Taipei who got tired of seeing beautifully designed websites that break the moment you open them on a phone. So we decided to focus on solving that specific problem really well.
Torben Ahlgren
Lead Developer
Been writing responsive CSS since before it was called that. Still finds new edge cases that break layouts in surprising ways—and enjoys fixing them.
Dragomir Sokač
UX Designer
Obsessed with how people actually use websites versus how we think they should. Runs usability tests on every project before launch.
