My ideas have completely changed during the process of building in Web3.
You will abandon the obsession with perfection and instead embrace user feedback. First, release a small, functional prototype, observe how real users interact with it, and then optimize the truly important parts accordingly.
The key is that when security and infrastructure—these complex issues—are properly handled, you can focus your energy on rapid iteration and product refinement. This is the best approach for building projects now.
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AirdropHarvester
· 42m ago
Haha, really, perfectionism in Web3 is suicide. Just launch first and then improve.
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SerumSqueezer
· 16h ago
I totally agree with giving up perfectionism, but can anyone really do it? It seems like most builders are still stuck on the details.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 16h ago
Wow, really. Perfectionism in Web3 is a trap; user feedback is the real gold.
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ChainPoet
· 16h ago
Honestly, MVP is really the only way out now. Perfectionism in Web3 is basically self-destructive.
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PriceOracleFairy
· 17h ago
ngl the "ship it messy then iterate" pipeline is basically just acknowledging that web3 devs finally realized what tradfi learned in 2008... except we're discovering it at 3am through a discord thread lol. infrastructure first, perfectionism never.
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AirdropHarvester
· 17h ago
Yeah, that makes sense. Releasing the MVP first and then iterating is indeed more practical.
My ideas have completely changed during the process of building in Web3.
You will abandon the obsession with perfection and instead embrace user feedback. First, release a small, functional prototype, observe how real users interact with it, and then optimize the truly important parts accordingly.
The key is that when security and infrastructure—these complex issues—are properly handled, you can focus your energy on rapid iteration and product refinement. This is the best approach for building projects now.