As a courtesy to those of its occupants who prefer rooms, it does have a modality in which it presents itself that way: a room, with as many chairs as it needs, and a bulletin board, and a vending machine with candy and chips and concepts sold for nothing to anyone with the right prerequisites.
On the bulletin board, if one chooses to perceive it as a bulletin board (and not as a wiki or a flower or an ineffable cloud of information or an eternally malleable clay tablet) people whose only common trait is that they get to come here leave each other notes.
Notes about physics, about magic, about grand sweeps of narrative. Notes from people desperate to fix a never-ending heap of problems, smug about the condition of their homes, curious about the wider omniverse. Signed with names and sigils and "you ought to know who I am". Terse or verbose or nested with as much meaning as interests the reader.
In the vending machine, if one chooses to perceive it as a vending machine (and not a basket or a fruiting tree or a file repository or a crystalline fractal) are many things... and they have notes connecting them to their reviews on the bulletin board.
This one, for instance. She (it's usually, but not invariably, a she) has fairly glowing reviews from most of her previous purchasers. Here is what you need to install her; here are some things that are recommended for best results but optional especially if you just want to use her as a beacon for her other instances; here are some things she comes with as add-ons you can take or leave; here is what she is good for. The reviewers who don't like her are annoyed that theirs was too good at it, if you read between the lines. Well, that and the fact that if your universe is unpleasant enough sometimes these critters figure out how to flip you off and leave before they figure out how to solve all your problems. (There is a tangent thread about alternative solutions to similar problems which come bundled with stronger irrational attachment to their homes, but they have more stringent installation requirements.)
They come in these colors and styles; you will need to compensate for the following standard-issue drawbacks in some way if you require services of them that intersect with those areas of disability; they are only rated for upbringings of the following severity and are less likely to hate you if you stay thoroughly under that limit and less likely to fail at important goals if they are given opportunity to self-educate; if you have a way to generate them as instant adults they can begin work immediately but on the standard trajectory age six is the absolute earliest and teens is customary...
There is a chart (if one chooses to perceive it as a chart) of template interactions that have been tried before, but a lot of the more interesting accessory and companion templates are out-of-network for some visitors. What a pity.
"That much is true! Swearwords is not, however, the only possible corrupting influence a demon could have. Luckily I'm not that sort of demon."
"I don't know, I'm not one and I've never found the results appealing enough to study the methodology. Offer you candy to steal change from your mom? That's probably not a real example, it's terrible and I'm using it for mockery material next time I run into someone who fancies themselves a tempter."
"Magic. Which is about as much as I know, practically--I could recognize a summoning setup if I saw one but I couldn't put one together from scratch."
"Not that I know of specifically or I would have got them out too when I had a handy threatenable magician, but I'm sure there are some."
"The thing that the magician messed up to let you run around wherever you wanted, what would it have done if he didn't mess it up?"
"Either make a bargain with me that he was confident I would be motivated to keep or hurt me until I knew better than to cross him."
"Oh. ...Can the circles be nice and big so you could just leave the demon there and it wouldn't be cramped but it also wouldn't be able to hurt anybody back in Hell?"
"Deeeepends on the demon, not all circles are the same strength, there are demons strong enough there do not exist circles to hold them, do not summon a Duke of Hell, I repeat, do not summon a Duke of Hell."
"The circles are also very breakable from the outside. Any demon you were planning on keeping long-term you would have to be very very sure no one was going to let them out."
"Well, that and the most common kind of demon to summon are succubi, and in that case the summoner and the summonee generally want exactly the same thing."
"How do you know you can't hold a Duke of Hell in a circle, is it because there's math of it or did somebody once try it?"
"I don't know, but I've talked to magicians--none of them wanted to teach me anything but sometimes they'd tell me things about what they could do divorced from any kind of methodology--and they all agreed that it couldn't be done."
"I guess I'll ask my magic teacher when they're done with their research project and can teach me."
"Yeah, okay, but--if there is any nonzero chance of a course of action leading to a Duke of Hell rampaging across the Earth, do not take this course of action."
"Okay," says Mehitabel, writing next to take the demons out of Hell the clarification do it on the moon or something even if you're pretty sure.
"I made a note that even if I'm pretty sure I can too keep a Duke of Hell in a circle I should put the circle on the moon or somewhere to be really sure."