Ever notice how the projects you learn the most from are the ones you actually enjoyed building?
Somewhere along the way, a lot of us start treating coding like a checklist — LeetCode streaks, certificates, "10 frameworks you must know in 2026." And sure, that stuff has its place. But the developers who stick around long-term are usually the ones who kept a little bit of play in their process.
A few ways to bring the fun back in:
Build something dumb on purpose. A Discord bot that only insults you. A CLI tool that translates your code into pirate speak. It doesn't need to be useful — it needs to make you want to open your editor.
Pick weird constraints. Build a to-do list app with no JavaScript. Recreate a feature using the oldest language you know. Constraints turn boring problems into puzzles.
Pair up for nonsense projects. Find another fun coder and build something neither of you needs. The collaboration teaches you more than the project does.
Ship ugly, ship often. Perfection kills momentum. A janky working thing beats a polished thing that never leaves your laptop.
At the end of the day, the "fun coder" mindset isn't about being unserious — it's about remembering why you started in the first place.
What's the most fun, most pointless thing you've ever built? Drop it below 👇
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