u/External-Video-2666

I launched Slopdar on Product Hunt today. Come roast your website 😈

I launched Slopdar on Product Hunt today. Come roast your website 😈

Hey everyone! 👋

Today I launched Slopdar on Product Hunt.

I got tired of seeing websites that looked like they were shipped straight from an AI prompt... so I built a website that judges other websites.

Paste any URL and Slopdar will:

🔥 Roast your website
🤖 Detect AI fingerprints
📊 Give you a Slop Score (0–100)

Some websites survive.

Some get absolutely cooked. 😂

It's completely free and requires no signup.

I'm looking for websites that can either:

  • Break Slopdar
  • Fool Slopdar
  • Or earn the lowest Slop Score possible.

If you enjoy it, I'd really appreciate your support on Product Hunt today. ❤️

🔗 Product Hunt: https://www.producthunt.com/products/slopdar

Now... who's brave enough to roast their own website? 😈

u/External-Video-2666 — 4 days ago

What's been harder for you: building the product or finding users?

Developing the product proved easier than capturing attention.

It took me around 2 months before I released the SaaS product I’ve developed.

Prior to releasing the product, I believed the hardest part was the technical side of things: the features, the bugs, the tech stack, the onboarding process, and the design.

But after launching it, I discovered another challenge.

No one knows your product.

I have learned a lot about marketing, content creation, Reddit, X, and customer discovery than anticipated. The learning curve was huge.

While I’m in an earlier stage of developing a SaaS business, the journey has certainly made me appreciate building a product even further. Getting users takes twice the effort of building a SaaS.

To founders who already passed through this phase:

What got you that first set of customers?

reddit.com
u/External-Video-2666 — 20 days ago