r/roastmystartup 15h ago

Roast my AI design tool — one sentence in, a full design system + screens out. Real product or toy?

3 Upvotes

The product: v-1.design. Type one sentence ("habit tracker for runners") and it generates a named design system — contrast-checked color palette, type scale, components — plus every main screen as real React/Tailwind you can copy. Then you point at any screen and say "redo this darker" and it redraws it. It's for devs/founders who can build the app but freeze when it's time to make it look good.

The market: crowded and a little scary. v0, Lovable, Bolt, and Figma's AI stuff all circle this space. Most of them spit out a one-off screen; my bet is on the design SYSTEM part — consistent tokens across every screen so the whole app stays on-brand, not just one pretty page.

Where I think I'm weak (be honest with me here): v0 has Vercel's whole distribution machine and I have about 40 followers and zero marketing budget. Vague prompts can still give you a generic-looking first pass. And honestly I'm not 100% sure the "design system" framing even matters to buyers vs. them just wanting "give me one nice screen."

Stage: it's live, payments actually work (one-time credit packs), I have a handful of users and basically $0 revenue. What I need is brutal feedback on whether the core promise is actually compelling or whether I'm solving a problem people don't really feel. Free to try, no card: https://v-1.design

Roast the positioning, the pricing, the demo, whatever you want — mostly I want to hear why you wouldn't pay for it.


r/roastmystartup 20h ago

Roasy My App - Gamification Budget App

3 Upvotes

Built a savings app where each goal is a mountain you climb (deposits = progress up the slope, with streaks to keep the habit going). The entire point is that it should NOT feel like a budgeting spreadsheet.

So the one thing I need before launch — from this screen alone, gut reaction:

A game you'd open daily, or a chore you'd ignore?

One word is fine. If it's "chore," tell me the thing that's pushing it that way.

Website


r/roastmystartup 1h ago

Built QrNotify: QR codes that let people contact you without revealing your phone number. Roast my idea.

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Upvotes

r/roastmystartup 2h ago

Roast my travel app. Genuinely tear it apart, I need to know if I'm cooked.

1 Upvotes

I built an iOS app called Triply. It turns the travel reels and tiktoks you save into a mapped, planned trip. Share any video, AI pulls every place mentioned, drops them on a map, and you plan your trip from it.

I've been heads-down on this for a few months and I genuinely can't tell anymore if it's good, if it's stupid, or if I've talked myself into a problem nobody actually has.

So please roast away and be brutalllll

Three things I really want torn apart:

  • Is this a real problem, or am I projecting my own dysfunction onto everyone else?
  • Why isn't this just a Google Maps feature? Is it a product, or a feature pretending to be one?
  • Is my tagline ("Save every place from any Reel in just one tap") garbage?

What I'm already scared of:

  • Android users hating me (iOS-only for now)
  • The whole premise being too niche to ever scale

Here is the app link guys roast away
https://link.triply.au/reddit


r/roastmystartup 2h ago

I built something for Ethiopian businesses, but I’m struggling to get my first customers. What am I doing wrong?

1 Upvotes

Hi everyone,

I’m looking for honest advice, not trying to advertise.

My name is Amanuel. I’m Ethiopian, and for the last three months I’ve been building a Telegram-based task delegation system called Taskifay.

The idea is to help Ethiopian business owners delegate remote work in a more organized way.

For example, a business owner might need edited videos, graphic ads, carousel posts, captions, research, admin work, finance-related help, or a full content package. Instead of hiring someone full-time or manually chasing random freelancers, they can post one clear task request, choose the skill areas needed, set the budget and deadline, and receive applications from people who want to do the work.

The system is not just a simple “post and wait” idea. After a task doer is chosen, the bot helps manage the workflow. It starts the timer when the person confirms they are starting, sends reminders, tracks deadlines, opens revision windows, supports approval or fix requests, and uses ratings, task history, held payment, and dispute handling to make the process feel safer for both sides.

Now, I know what some people may be thinking:

“Doesn’t Upwork or Fiverr already exist?”

And honestly, that is one of the questions I’m trying to think through seriously.

The reason I still believe this might matter is because the Ethiopian market is different.

For many local Ethiopian businesses, paying international freelance prices in USD can be very expensive because of the currency difference. Even if a task looks affordable on a global platform, the cost can feel very different when you are earning and operating in Ethiopian birr.

There is also the local context issue.

A lot of Ethiopian businesses don’t just need “a designer” or “a video editor.” They need someone who understands the language, the humor, the culture, the way Ethiopian customers respond online, the local business environment, and the kind of content that feels natural here.

That is especially true for businesses that want content for TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, or Telegram. A technically good video can still fail if the wording, tone, timing, or cultural feeling is off.

So my thinking is not: “Let me copy Fiverr.”

My thinking is more: “Can there be a more local, affordable, and trust-focused way for Ethiopian businesses to delegate work to Ethiopian task doers, using local currency, local payment methods, local context, and a workflow that keeps both sides accountable?”

That is the problem I’m trying to solve.

A lot of businesses don’t need full-time employees for every task, but they still need work done properly. And many skilled Ethiopians can do this work, but they don’t always have access to business owners who need them.

I especially think it could help Ethiopian businesses and diaspora business owners who need content that fits the Ethiopian market, because local wording, humor, visuals, and culture matter a lot in content.

But here is where I’m stuck:

It has been around three months, and getting the first real customers has been much harder than I expected.

I’m starting to question whether the problem is the idea, the way I explain it, the trust issue, the target audience, the platform being on Telegram, the payment flow, the fact that people already think of Upwork/Fiverr, or just the fact that I don’t have enough proof yet.

So I wanted to ask people here honestly:

If you were in my position, how would you get the first 3 to 5 real customers?

Would you target business owners, marketers, agencies, shop owners, diaspora founders, or freelancers first?

Does this sound like a real local problem, or am I forcing an idea that people may not care about enough?

What would make a business owner trust a new system like this?

Would you lead with “local Ethiopian alternative to global platforms,” “save money compared to hiring full-time,” “avoid chasing freelancers,” “get Ethiopian-market content,” or “safer task delegation”?

What would make you ignore a post like this?

And what would make you actually try it?

I’m open to brutal feedback. I would rather hear the truth now than keep building in the wrong direction.

Thank you.


r/roastmystartup 3h ago

Roast my startup: RankForge — keyword tool for KDP authors

1 Upvotes

https://rankforged.com

What it does: Helps Amazon KDP authors find low-competition, high-search keywords so their books actually rank.

Why I built it: I was spending hours manually searching Amazon categories. Existing tools like Publisher Rocket cost $97/year and felt outdated.

Current state: Beta, free tier available.

Roast away — pricing, positioning, UI, anything.


r/roastmystartup 4h ago

I created a free sport management app

1 Upvotes

Well... let me know what you think.

I built Pivot Sports, a free iOS and web app for sports team management. The idea came from my local tennis club where everything was handled through text threads.

I’m currently working on getting people from my tennis club to start using it, but I still need to improve the mobile web experience since Android isn’t supported yet.

Current features:

  • Create teams and groups
  • Schedule events
  • RSVP tracking
  • Team discussions
  • In-app notifications
  • Role management and invite codes

IOS: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/pivot-sports/id6756797740

Web: https://pivotsports.app

Roast me politely please 😃


r/roastmystartup 18h ago

Notice: Journaling app that surfaces patterns. Just launched. Roast everything.

0 Upvotes

Just launched Notice on iOS this week. 3 months solo build. Want the harsh feedback before I commit to a v1.1.0 roadmap.

What it is: a journaling app that surfaces one deep insights  per day about your own life. Patterns you'd never have spotted yourself. Stuff like "you sleep 40 minutes less on days you drink coffee after 2pm." You log moods, habits, and short reflections; the app does pattern detection locally and tells you what it found.

Decisions I made that might be roastable:

- Free to download. £4.99/month or £39.99/year for "Notice Plus" (unlocks the full insights feed and unlimited reflections).

- iOS only at launch. Android nowhere on the roadmap.

- Pattern detection is statistical methods, not LLMs. I genuinely don't think AI-generated insights are the right tool for journaling, but maybe I'm wrong.

App Store: https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/notice-journal-habits/id6769771645

What I want roasted, specifically: 

  1. The positioning. Is "the journal that pays attention" actually different enough from what's already in the App Store, or am I lying to myself? 

  2. The pricing. £4.99/month feels right to me. Other indies have told me it's too expensive for an indie launch with no reviews. Am I leaving money on the table or am I overpricing? 

  3. iOS-only. Half my potential audience is on Android. Am I being lazy or strategic? 

  4. The feed mechanic itself. Is "patterns surface into a feed over time" the right pacing, or do users want one big weekly summary or something denser? 

Tell me what's actually broken. I'd rather hear it now than learn it from declining numbers in 3 months. 

Background for context: 18, solo dev, no funding, no team. First app. Earning from indie work, no salary, so the cost of being wrong is real.