▲ 171 r/Makeup

What's one makeup product you bought because of Reddit that actually lived up to the hype?

I've noticed that Reddit recommendations are often much more honest than TikTok or Instagram, so I'm curious.

What's one makeup product you purchased because people in this subreddit kept recommending it, and it genuinely turned out to be worth the money?

Bonus points if it's:

  1. Affordable
  2. Works for sensitive skin
  3. A hidden gem that deserves more attention

I'd also love to know if there are any "holy grail" products that you think are overrated.

Looking forward to hearing everyone's favorites!

reddit.com
u/MainAutomatic1206 — 13 hours ago
▲ 63 r/drugstoreMUA+1 crossposts

What makeup products are actually worth spending more money on?

I'm planning to buy some new makeup and don't want to spend extra money unless it's really worth it.

Which makeup products do you think are worth buying from expensive brands, and which ones are just as good from the drugstore?

I'd love to hear your recommendations and what has worked best for you. 😊

reddit.com
u/MainAutomatic1206 — 3 days ago

is genuinely enjoying exercise a real thing or do people just get good enough at tolerating it that it starts to feel the same?

because i see people at the gym who genuinely look like they're having a good time and i cannot tell if that's real or if they've just done it long enough that their face stopped showing the suffering. i've been going for about four months now and i don't hate it but i also wouldn't say i enjoy it. it's more like i enjoy having done it. is that what people mean when they say they love working out? or does something actually click at some point where the thing itself becomes fun? genuinely asking because i'm trying to figure out if i should wait for that feeling or if it just doesn't come for some people. (edited) 

reddit.com
u/MainAutomatic1206 — 8 days ago

From side project to $3K MRR: the 10 months nobody posts about

Month 1: Built it. 8 people saw it. 0 paid.
Month 2: Rebuilt. 2 paid. $58 MRR.
Month 3: 3 Reddit posts. 6 paying. $174 MRR.
Month 4: Nothing worked. Flat.
Month 5: Lifetime deal to 40 email subscribers. 11 bought.
Month 6: First organic referral. Felt huge.
Month 7: Rewrote onboarding. $820 MRR.
Month 8: Featured in a niche newsletter. $1,400 MRR.
Month 9: Churn hit. Back to $1,100 MRR. Brutal.
Month 10: Fixed activation problem. $3,000 MRR.

Month 9 taught me more than any growth month. Churn will kill you if you don't obsess over it early.

What did your first 10 months look like?

reddit.com
u/MainAutomatic1206 — 1 month ago