building in progress

i came here to build things reddit hasn't seen yet.

not from this ecosystem. came from years of shipping products, solving real problems, writing code that survives production. now channeling all of that into devvit.

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001 / manifesto

reddit gave developers a platform. a real one. not a toy API with rate limits and prayers. an actual runtime, with storage, with UI primitives, with distribution to millions.

most people see that and think "cool, i'll make a poll." i see it and think about what communities are missing. what would make someone open a subreddit and feel something they didn't expect.

i'm not here to pad a portfolio. i'm here because reddit is one of the last places on the internet where communities still mean something. and devvit is how you make that even more true.

100M+
daily active users on reddit
100K+
active communities
1
developer platform that matters
interactive posts community tools real-time experiences moderation utilities custom post types redis-backed state scheduled jobs event triggers interactive posts community tools real-time experiences moderation utilities custom post types redis-backed state scheduled jobs event triggers
002 / approach

i don't build apps. i build things people didn't know they needed until they can't stop using them.

01

community-first

every app starts with a real problem a real community has. not a feature list. not a tech demo. a gap that, once filled, makes the subreddit feel alive in a way it wasn't before.

02

production-grade

code that handles edge cases. state that doesn't corrupt. UIs that don't break on mobile. the boring stuff that separates a demo from something 50,000 people actually use daily.

03

ship and iterate

get it in front of users fast. watch what they actually do. throw away assumptions. rebuild the parts that matter. repeat until it feels inevitable.

003 / status
~/devvit-apps
# current status
$ devvit --version
devvit 0.11.x
 
$ cat status.txt
apps: building
eta: soon
commitment: absolute
 
$ echo "watch this space"
watch this space
004 / timeline
now
deep in devvit docs and platform internals
understanding every primitive, every hook, every constraint. you don't build great things on platforms you half-understand.
week 2-4
first apps in development
prototyping interactive post types. testing with real subreddits. breaking things on purpose to learn what holds.
month 2
public launch on this page
live apps, real users, real feedback. this page becomes the showcase.
ongoing
iterate, ship, repeat
every app gets better. new apps get built. the portfolio grows because the work doesn't stop.

"reddit gave developers a platform. i'm going to make that bet worth it."

the entire point

005 / why this matters

the internet is losing its communities. reddit is the exception.

every other platform optimized for content. reddit optimized for people talking to each other. that's rare. that's worth protecting.

devvit is how developers get to be part of that story. not as outsiders scraping an API, but as builders with first-class tools making first-class experiences.

that's why i'm here.

interactive posts

not just text and links. experiences that live inside the feed. games, tools, visualizations that make people stop scrolling and start participating.

community utilities

the tools moderators wish they had. the automations that save hours. the small things that make running a subreddit feel less like a job.

things that don't exist yet

the best devvit apps haven't been imagined. that's the point. the platform is young. the opportunity is now.

this page will look very different soon.

apps are being built. check back.

explore devvit