I don't know about you, but I always knew programming would be the thing I enjoy most — though learning how to do it was another story. I didn’t find programming hard because it actually was; the problem was that it felt fragmented, boring, confusing, and directionless.
I remember when I first dipped my toes into web development and began learning React and Express. Tutorials were a mess, scattered across the internet. Resources either stayed at a "hello world" level or jumped straight to god-tier complexity.
Unreal Engine was the breaking point for me. Beginner resources were shallow or outdated, and advanced ones assumed far too much. There was no coherent path to success.
Most platforms teach syntax, not thinking — or they walk you through a project: you follow the steps, run the code, and it works… but you don’t actually understand why. You finish and think, “Okay… now what? I still can’t build things on my own.” And I know you’ve all been there.
People don’t struggle with programming because coding is impossible. They struggle because learning paths are disconnected, progress is hard to measure, and platforms don’t adapt to what you actually need.
Because of this repeated frustration — every time I wanted to learn a new language, framework, or game engine — I began building a platform around one simple idea: you’re never left asking what to learn next. Learning isn’t linear or static. Your path adapts based on what you’ve learned, what you’ve struggled with, and what you’re trying to build. Instead of being pushed through content, you’re guided forward.
Instead of “here’s the lesson, here’s the solution,” learning begins to feel like: “make a prediction, try something, get feedback, understand why it worked or didn’t.”
The goal is to move progress from feeling like “I completed another video” to “I actually can do more than yesterday.”
I’m still working on this, as I have been for months. A lot of it is unfinished, and some ideas might not work — but it’s the platform I wish existed when I was learning, especially during those “I’m stuck but don’t know why” moments.
I’m extremely curious: has learning programming ever felt like this for you? Fragmented, aimless? I’ll be sharing more as I build this out, and if this resonates, feel free to follow along. Would love to hear anyone's thoughts.
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