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Been diving deep into Web3 building lately and honestly, the tooling landscape has gotten pretty interesting. Used to think creating decentralized applications was only for hardcore developers, but that's changing fast.
Let me break down what I've been looking at. The core idea behind Web3 websites is pretty straightforward - instead of relying on centralized servers that some corporation controls, you're building on decentralized networks where you actually own your data. No intermediaries, no one holding your information hostage, no renewal fees for domains. That's the real shift happening.
PermaPages caught my attention because it's genuinely accessible. You connect your Arweave wallet, upload some content, and boom - your data lives permanently on the permaweb. The immutability aspect is wild. Once you publish something, it's there forever, associated with your wallet. They've got this WeaveMail feature too for encrypted messaging. You do need AR tokens for subdomains, but the barrier to entry is way lower than it used to be.
Then there's Unstoppable Domains, which is doing something clever with blockchain-based domain names. You buy once, own it forever - no annual renewals. Upload your site to IPFS through their dashboard or desktop app, and visitors can access it through Web3 browsers like Brave. The wallet integration angle is solid too. Instead of remembering long wallet addresses, your domain becomes your identity across the whole ecosystem.
Webflow is interesting because it's not purely Web3, but you can layer Web3 capabilities on top using APIs and tools like Moralis. It's more of a hybrid approach if you're already comfortable with their drag-and-drop interface. Not the purest Web3 play, but practical if you want design flexibility.
Fleek is where things get more sophisticated. They're building on Internet Computer, IPFS, Filecoin, and other open protocols. If you want to get serious about decentralized hosting and want technical guarantees around security and privacy, this is the kind of platform that delivers. They've got CMS features, NFT gallery support, integration with Web3 Storage - it's a full stack approach.
Appypie rounds out the options for people who want zero coding knowledge. Drag-and-drop, templates, real-time updates. It's optimized for speed even on slower connections, which matters more than people realize.
What's interesting is that each of these tools is solving the same fundamental problem differently - how do you make Web3 websites accessible without requiring a computer science degree? The fact that we have options like this now, with varying levels of complexity and customization, suggests the space is maturing.
The bigger picture: Web3 websites represent a genuine shift in how internet infrastructure could work. You're not just getting a technical upgrade - you're getting actual ownership of your digital presence. Whether you're building a personal profile or something more complex, the tooling is there now. Worth exploring if you're curious about where this is heading.