I want to start with a confession:
I had zero programming background when I decided to build my own website.
No computer science degree.
No years of JavaScript experience.
No “I’ve been coding since I was 12” story.
What I did have was curiosity, a simple idea, and a powerful AI tool: Codex.
This is the story of how I went from knowing nothing about web development to launching a small but real game website — entirely by myself.
The Idea: A Simple Game, Not a Startup
I wasn’t trying to build the next big SaaS or a complex platform.
I just wanted to create a small game website that:
Works
Loads fast
Is useful and fun
Can actually be finished by one person
I chose a classic and timeless format: word search games.
They’re simple, accessible to all ages, and surprisingly hard to do well if you care about UX, performance, and content scale.
The Biggest Problem: I Can’t Code
Here’s where most people stop.
I didn’t know:
How to set up a project
What a framework is
How routing works
How to deploy a site
Even “HTML + CSS + JS” sounded overwhelming.
This is where Codex changed everything.
Instead of asking “How do I learn programming for 6 months?”, I started asking:
“What’s the smallest step I can take today?”
Using Codex as My Developer Brain
Codex became more than a tool — it became my pair programmer, tutor, and architect.
I used it to:
Generate page layouts
Explain code line by line in plain English
Fix errors I didn’t even understand yet
Refactor messy logic into something clean
Suggest better structure when things felt wrong
Most importantly, Codex didn’t just give answers — it explained the “why”.
That’s how learning actually happened.
Building the First Real Pages
Once I had a basic structure, things started to click.
I built:
A homepage
Individual game pages
Printable word search layouts
Simple navigation
SEO-friendly URLs
At some point, I realized:
“This is no longer a toy. This is a real website.”
That moment was incredibly motivating.
Launching the Site (Yes, It’s Live)
After iteration after iteration, I finally launched my project:
It’s a simple game website focused on printable and playable word search puzzles.
Is it perfect?
Absolutely not.
But it’s real, public, and built from nothing — and that matters more than perfection.
What I Learned as a Zero-Basics Builder
Here are a few lessons I wish I knew earlier:
You don’t need to “learn everything first”
You can learn while building. In fact, it’s better that way.AI doesn’t replace thinking — it amplifies it
You still make decisions. Codex just removes friction.Small, boring ideas actually ship
Simple games > complex dreams that never launch.Shipping changes your mindset forever
Once you ship once, you stop fearing “starting”.
Who This Is For
If you’re:
A non-developer
A solo builder
Someone with ideas but no technical confidence
Tired of tutorials and just want to make something
Then yes — this path is possible for you too.
Final Thoughts
I didn’t become a “real developer” overnight.
But I did become a builder.
And that happened the moment I stopped waiting for permission, stopped chasing perfect knowledge, and started using the tools available right now.
If someone with zero coding experience can build a live game website, the bar might be lower than you think.
Thanks for reading — and keep building.
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