A little offtopic: where this obviously vibe coded style comes from? I don't recognize it in any modern css framework (nor in the old ones fwiw). It's seems like all vibe coded landing pages looks the same but I can quite put my finger on what's its origin.
The marketing page is entirely from Gemini, so I was able to spend my time writing and testing the project's source code. simply I'm not a fan of vibe coding when building something for others that they pay for. thats why.
I think this particular design language became a bit of a trend before AI ate it up. I'm not sure what it's called but it proceeded neobrutalism and every single desktop app or self hosted solution had a landing page that looked exactly like this. I imagine AI saw the pattern and doubled down cause it's Claude's favourite design language.
Fun glitch on the homepage: the dynamic text runs over a line break, so when it “deletes” the brand, the entire page gets shifted up a bit.
Makes everything constantly move up and down on mobile.
A little offtopic: where this obviously vibe coded style comes from? I don't recognize it in any modern css framework (nor in the old ones fwiw). It's seems like all vibe coded landing pages looks the same but I can quite put my finger on what's its origin.
The marketing page is entirely from Gemini, so I was able to spend my time writing and testing the project's source code. simply I'm not a fan of vibe coding when building something for others that they pay for. thats why.
I think this particular design language became a bit of a trend before AI ate it up. I'm not sure what it's called but it proceeded neobrutalism and every single desktop app or self hosted solution had a landing page that looked exactly like this. I imagine AI saw the pattern and doubled down cause it's Claude's favourite design language.
I think this is correct. It was common across all SaaS products id say right before LLMs and as LLMs were taking off.