u/No_One008

Been going through a bunch of SaaS landing pages recently and noticed a pattern. Most of them don’t have a feature problem they have a clarity problem.

Common things I saw:

  • not clear what the product does in the first few seconds
  • too many actions competing on the screen
  • no obvious next step

It made me realize how easy it is to miss these when you’re the one building.

I started building something My Design Audit to help catch these issues early, mainly for my own projects.

have you noticed similar patterns? Or what UX issue do you see the most?

u/No_One008 — 15 days ago

Been playing around with vibe coding tools and it’s honestly crazy how fast you can build now.

I built a few things recently and they work… but I keep wondering, Is the UX actually good, or does it just feel fine because I built it?

Sometimes:

  • flows feel a bit confusing
  • it’s not clear what the next step is
  • everything works, but still feels slightly off

As the builder, it’s hard to notice these things.

So I started working on a small tool called ( My Design Audit ) to catch UX/UI issues early while building mainly for my own projects

Still figuring it out, but it’s been helpful to spot things I usually miss.

how are you all checking UX when vibe coding?
Or are you just shipping and fixing later?

reddit.com
u/No_One008 — 15 days ago
▲ 19 r/vibecodeapp+6 crossposts

I’ve been playing around with vibe coding apps lately and it’s honestly crazy how fast you can build things now.

But I keep running into this problem, Just because something works, doesn’t mean the UX is actually good.

Sometimes:

  • flows feel a bit confusing
  • it’s not clear what to do next
  • everything works, but still feels off

And as the person who built it, it’s hard to notice these things.

I’ve been looking into this more and even started building a small tool called My Design Audit to catch UX/UI issues early (mainly for my own projects).

Curious how others here deal with this
Do you just rely on feedback, or do you have some way to check UX before users drop off?

u/No_One008 — 13 days ago

At first I thought it was a traffic problem, but in many cases it came down to small UX/UI issues like:

  • unclear messaging (you don’t immediately get what the product does)
  • weak or buried CTAs
  • too much friction before users take action

What surprised me is how subtle these issues are the site “looks good” but something feels off. I started digging deeper into this and even built a small tool for myself to analyze sites and surface these UX/UI issues more systematically.

Curious how others here approach this:

  • do you rely more on experience or structured audits?
  • how do you prioritize what actually impacts conversions?

Would love to hear your thoughts.

reddit.com
u/No_One008 — 17 days ago

Hey everyone,

https://preview.redd.it/uxtx9drsiaug1.png?width=1537&format=png&auto=webp&s=23a05ba91ad03022c3042aaf29ec586cf654d703

I’ve been working on a small tool called My Design Audit.

The idea came from something I kept noticing a lot of websites look clean, but still don’t convert well. Usually it’s small things like unclear CTAs, weak messaging, or confusing flows.

So I built a tool where you can paste your website and it gives you:

  • UX issues it spots
  • why they might be hurting conversions
  • and suggestions on what to change

It’s still early, and I’m trying to make the feedback actually useful (not just generic stuff like “improve CTA”).

Would really appreciate honest feedback:

  • Does the output feel actionable?
  • Anything that feels wrong or too generic?
  • What would make this genuinely useful for you?

Happy to share the link if anyone wants to try it

reddit.com
u/No_One008 — 1 month ago