I thought DEV Challenges were about winning.
What participating in DEV Challenges taught me.
A few months ago, I joined DEV.
I didn't know many people.
I wasn't well known.
I simply wanted to become a better developer.
Like many newcomers, I believed something very simple.
"If I can win a challenge, maybe that means I'm becoming a real developer."
So I kept participating.
Sometimes I built retro games.
Sometimes I experimented with AI.
Sometimes I simply challenged myself to finish something before the deadline.
Every challenge taught me something.
Every badge made me smile.
But after several months, I realized something unexpected.
The biggest prize wasn't the badge.
I started asking myself...
What happens after the contest ends?
The badge stays on my profile.
The project goes to GitHub.
Then...
What's next?
That question stayed with me for a long time.
Then I realized something.
I had been focusing on the contest.
But the real value wasn't the contest.
It was the community.
Without DEV...
I would never have discussed ideas with developers from around the world.
I would never have received reactions from people I had admired.
I would never have met developers with completely different ways of thinking.
The challenge wasn't just building software.
The challenge was becoming part of a community.
Something I had rarely experienced before.
Most communication happens inside companies.
DEV felt different.
It gave me a place to keep showing up.
To keep learning.
To keep improving.
That matters more than I realized.
The hardest part isn't building software.
This surprised me.
As I kept building apps, I realized something.
Building an app is difficult.
But building a place where people discover that app...
is much harder.
That's when I started appreciating communities like DEV even more.
Someone had to build this place.
Someone had to create a market where beginners and experienced developers could stand on the same stage.
That's an incredible achievement.
My goal changed.
When I started...
my goal was simple.
Win a challenge.
Now...
I still want to create great projects.
I still hope to win someday.
But that's no longer my biggest goal.
Now I want to build things that continue to matter after the contest ends.
Projects.
Ideas.
Discussions.
Communities.
To anyone joining DEV for the first time:
If you're here because you want to win...
I understand.
That was me too.
But don't overlook something much bigger.
You're joining a community where people encourage each other, challenge each other, and grow together.
The badge may stay on your profile.
But the community stays with you.
I still don't know all the answers.
In fact...
I think I finally found the right question.
How can we create more places where independent developers can keep growing together?
I'd love to hear your thoughts.

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