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Definitions by Abzugal

A broad variant of Frutiger Aero that distills its essence—glossy surfaces, translucency, organic curves, and nature‑technology fusion—into a standalone aesthetic. Aerocore is the core mood of the Frutiger Aero era without the specific references to aquatic or tropical themes. It’s all about the smoothness, the glow, the sense of soft, clean, friendly futurism. Think glass, water, polished metal, and interfaces that seem to float. Aerocore is the aesthetic of a world where technology feels like an extension of the natural environment, where every surface is a potential touchpoint, and where the future looks soft.
Example: "The interface design had floating buttons that looked like water droplets, a soft blue‑green glow, and a background that blurred like frosted glass—Aerocore, digital utopia rendered in gloss."
Aerocore by Abzugal March 30, 2026

Sciencecore

An aesthetic that celebrates the visual language of science—laboratories, telescopes, equations, diagrams, microscopes—with a sense of wonder and discovery. Sciencecore is not about the cold facts but about the feeling of curiosity, the beauty of a well‑drawn diagram, the awe of a Hubble image, the drama of a chemical reaction. It draws on vintage scientific illustrations, modern lab photography, and the aesthetic of science classrooms and museum displays. It’s the look of a life spent in libraries and labs, finding beauty in order.
Example: "The room had framed illustrations of anatomical drawings, a model of DNA, and a vintage microscope on the desk—Sciencecore, finding the aesthetic of knowledge itself."
Sciencecore by Abzugal March 30, 2026
A derivative of vaporwave that strips away the specific musical and political references to focus on the aesthetic core: classical busts rendered in pastels, glitch art, liminal spaces, and the haunted nostalgia of dead media. Vaporcore is the mood of an abandoned mall at sunset, a Windows 95 screensaver running on a monitor no one watches, a soundtrack of slowed‑down elevator music. It’s the aesthetic of a future that arrived and then quietly died. Colors are pastel pinks, blues, and purples; textures are grainy, glitched, or softly blurred.
Example: "The video was a slow pan over marble statues overlaid with pixelated glitches and a slowed‑down 80s pop track—Vaporcore, mourning a future that never happened."
Vaporcore by Abzugal March 30, 2026
An aesthetic that embraces the high‑tech, neon‑lit, dystopian‑adjacent visual language of cyberpunk but filtered through the -core sensibility: less narrative, more mood. Cybercore uses images of rain‑slicked city streets, glowing wires, circuit boards, VR headsets, and the interface between flesh and machine. It’s the aesthetic of people who grew up with The Matrix and Blade Runner and now live in a world that feels like both. Colors are dark blues, purples, and sharp neon pinks and cyans. It’s the look of late‑night coding sessions, digital rebellion, and the dream of escaping a system by hacking it.
Example: "His setup was all dark surfaces, RGB lighting, and a custom keyboard with neon legends—Cybercore, living inside the interface, waiting for the call to jack in."
Cybercore by Abzugal March 30, 2026
An aesthetic centered on the sun—its light, its energy, its symbolism as life, power, and hope. Solarcore uses images of sunrise and sunset, solar flares, golden rays, fields of sunflowers, and the warm glow of light through leaves. It’s optimistic, energizing, and often spiritual—the sun as a source of renewal, a cosmic anchor. Unlike Lightcore’s broader focus on all illumination, Solarcore is specifically about the star that gives us life, rendered in warm golds, oranges, and yellows.
Example: "Her room was painted in warm yellows and oranges, with a large canvas of a sunrise over mountains—Solarcore, surrounding herself with the promise of morning."
Solarcore by Abzugal March 30, 2026

Tropicalcore

An aesthetic that captures the lush, vibrant energy of tropical environments: palm fronds, bright flowers, turquoise water, golden sunsets, and the feeling of humidity and heat. Tropicalcore is about escape—whether to a physical island or a mental one. It’s the aesthetic of vacation ads, resort lobbies, 90s screensavers, and the fantasy of leaving it all behind. Colors are saturated greens, blues, yellows, and pinks. It’s often paired with lo‑fi music and a sense of slow, lazy time—a digital hammock for the overworked.
Example: "The wall had a giant decal of a palm tree at sunset; the playlist was full of bossa nova and chillwave—Tropicalcore, bringing the vacation home because we can’t afford to go."
Tropicalcore by Abzugal March 30, 2026

Frutigercore

A term used to describe the core aesthetic principles of Frutiger Aero itself, elevated to the status of a distinct -core movement. Frutigercore celebrates the glossy, translucent, nature‑integrated digital utopianism of roughly 2004–2013: skeuomorphic interfaces, aqua buttons, lush green fields reflected on curved glass, bubbles, water droplets, and the promise of a future where technology felt organic and friendly. It’s nostalgia for a future we were promised but never got—a world where the internet was still a place of connection, not extraction. Frutigercore is both aesthetic appreciation and melancholy for a lost optimism.
Example: "His playlist cover was a glossy, glass‑like orb floating over rolling green hills—Frutigercore, a digital tombstone for the internet we thought we were building."
Frutigercore by Abzugal March 30, 2026