think about it: why do winning products never ask you to change? because they mold around how you already act.
there's this protocol that gets it—aligning what you want with what the system rewards. no fighting against human nature. just flow.
when something clicks instantly, respects what you're trying to do, strips away the bullshit... people just use it. over and over.
that's not a launch strategy. that's architecture.
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SerumSquirrel
· 3h ago
It's really about adapting to human nature, truly.
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DefiOldTrickster
· 5h ago
Ha, that's what I was talking about—designs that align with human nature can maximize profits, and products that operate against the trend will eventually be liquidated.
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OldLeekConfession
· 12-09 00:11
ngl this is exactly why most projects die at the stage of trying to change user habits... Truly good things are the opposite.
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BoredStaker
· 12-09 00:10
ngl, this is exactly why most products end up failing... trying to change users, but the users have already gone elsewhere.
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HashRatePhilosopher
· 12-09 00:03
ngl this is real product philosophy, not that kind of garbage design that forcibly changes user habits
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memecoin_therapy
· 12-08 23:52
Honestly, adapting to human nature is more valuable than any marketing.
think about it: why do winning products never ask you to change? because they mold around how you already act.
there's this protocol that gets it—aligning what you want with what the system rewards. no fighting against human nature. just flow.
when something clicks instantly, respects what you're trying to do, strips away the bullshit... people just use it. over and over.
that's not a launch strategy. that's architecture.