Free Simulation Platform HASH Launches to Model Complex Real-World Systems
HASH Goes Live: Build Simulations Without Math PhD
A new free online platform called HASH launched today, letting anyone model complicated real-world systems using simple JavaScript-like code. The tool targets problems where basic math fails to predict outcomes—like warehouse efficiency or employee interactions.

“HASH lets you simulate behavior directly, without needing to derive equations,” said Dei, founder of HASH, in a launch blog post. “You describe what each actor does, and the simulation shows you what happens.”
How It Works: From Warehouse Workers to Global Models
The platform’s core idea is that many systems are too complex for traditional math. For example, adding a fifth employee to a warehouse may actually reduce overall throughput because people get in each other’s way. A simple equation can’t capture that dynamic.
Instead, users write a few lines of JavaScript to define each worker’s rules. The simulation then runs thousands of interactions, revealing emergent behavior that can be tweaked and optimized. “You can change rules in real time and see the impact instantly,” Dei explained.
Background: Why HASH Exists
Most modeling tools require advanced mathematics or expensive software licenses. HASH aims to democratize simulation by making it free and accessible via a web browser. The platform handles everything from supply chain logistics to epidemiology.

Dei’s team built HASH after realizing that many problems—such as traffic flow or disease spread—defy simple formulas. “The world is full of feedback loops and non-linear effects that equations miss,” Dei said. “Simulation gives you a sandbox to experiment safely.”
What This Means
HASH lowers the barrier for professionals, students, and hobbyists to test ideas without real-world consequences. A warehouse manager, for instance, could simulate staffing changes before implementing them.
“Instead of guessing, you can run a simulation and see exactly which rules produce the best outcome,” Dei noted. The platform is live now at hash.ai. Early users are already modeling customer queues, factory layouts, and even pandemic spread.