: Using the Wayback Machine , users can navigate the 2013 version of the Nick Jr. website to see the original interface, featured games, and character art.

, preserving the digital landscape of the network during a transitional period for preschool media. These archives provide a functional look at the interactive games, character lineups, and daily schedules that defined the era. Digital Presence & Website Features

: Digital coloring books, "Sticker Pictures," and "Face Painting" activities featuring characters like Nahal from Shimmer and Shine Video Content

Furthermore, this collection highlights the importance of digital preservation in the face of "digital rot." Children’s media is surprisingly fragile. Because the target audience ages out of the content rapidly, networks often see little value in preserving their broadcast history. Old master tapes are wiped, websites are taken down, and early flash games are lost to incompatible software. The Internet Archive acts as a safeguard against this institutional forgetfulness. By archiving the 2013 broadcast, volunteers and archivists have ensured that a specific generation of now-young adults can revisit the exact television landscape that shaped their childhoods. It allows for the study of the transition period when Nick Jr. rebranded its logo and imaging, a shift that signaled broader changes in corporate strategy.

The Archive does contain full episodes of Nick Jr. shows from 2013, as those were never hosted on the public website. The video player linked to external CDNs that the Wayback Machine did not fully capture. Additionally, the interactive “video mixer” and “create your own story” tools—which relied on backend databases—are broken beyond repair.