About imgi
imgi makes before/after image sliders. You drop in two pictures and get a draggable slider on a link you can send anyone, with no account needed to make it or to open it. That's the whole tool.
What people use it for
Two screenshots side by side never quite land. The eye can't line them up, and the change you're trying to show gets lost in the gap. A slider fixes that: same frame, same spot, drag to reveal. People use imgi for photo edits, design revisions, game mods and texture packs, AI upscales and restorations, room renovations, and repairs, anything where "look what changed" is the point.
How it works
Add your two images, label the sides if you want, give it a title, create it. You get a permanent link like imgi.co/c/AbC123 that opens on phones and desktops with nothing to install. From there you can also host a single image, drop a live slider into your own blog or docs with one line, load up to ten images into a single comparison, or export the whole thing as a GIF, MP4, or WebP for the places a live slider can't reach, like a Discord message or a README.
What we care about
Keeping it free and fast, mostly. The core tool costs nothing and doesn't ask you to sign up, and it runs on a global edge network so links open quickly wherever someone is. Your comparisons never go into a public gallery, the links are unguessable, and you can delete anything you've uploaded whenever you want. If you care about exact pixels, offline mode and full-quality uploads let you compare images without recompressing them first.
Who runs it
imgi is an independent, self-funded project, built and maintained in Norway. It's kept small on purpose, and it's worked on regularly. If something's broken, or you want a feature, or you're just stuck, the contact page reaches us, and we read everything that comes in.
Safety
Every upload is checked to confirm it's a real image and not something disguised as one. If you spot something that shouldn't be here, the report page flags it for review, and the acceptable use policy spells out what's allowed. For what we collect and why, there's the privacy policy.